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What do you feel is the most challenging Prince album? I've been listening to a lot of avante garde music and have been considering music that is progressive in general - or kind of pushes the art form in some way. . With that in mind what do you think the most challenging Prince album is? One where he got furthest away from pop and really contributed something interesting and entirely different to the world of music? . Cheers! | |
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I think his run of Sign O' the Times / Black Album / Lovesexy seems to be his most unique sounds and certainly to the average listener those would be challenging. They defy normal genres and, or, normal arrangements in many of the songs. But for me personally "Lovesexy" was his most challenging album. I felt like it was a great experiment without regard to what was cool at the time. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
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The Rainbow Children. I've yet to warm up to it. I don't hate it...much. But it's never one I pull out to hear something different. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Totally agree. The wooh is on the one! | |
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TrivialPursuit said: The Rainbow Children. I've yet to warm up to it. I don't hate it...much. But it's never one I pull out to hear something different. I agree.some fans love this one and some dislike it a lot.That's why I believe its most challenging. | |
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Xpectation or Rainbow Children perhaps. Nobody I know gun' bite | |
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If you're talking about most challenging from the perspective of when it was released, I'd say Around The World In A Day. Coming off the back of something as big and accessible as Purple Rain I can see how ATWIAD would be seen as a massive departure and would be challenging for most of his fanbase at the time. It's not even really comparable to other chart music at the time. If you're referring to his back catalogue now, then my vote would be for Rainbow Children. The religious feel of it is definitely not to everyone's taste and it tends to split opinion of even the most hardcore fans. | |
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N.E.W.S. and TRC, | |
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The Rainbow Children by far. I have always liked some of the songs, but as a whole, the concept is over my head. I know its JWs theology which explains all of it. | |
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It was obvious that TRC would be the winner here, so I'll name another one: the sheer length and diversity of Emancipation also took some time and effort to digest. | |
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TRC You shouldnt have to try so hard to like a Prince album. (Insert something clever here) | |
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Lovesexy | |
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TRC Welcome 2 The Dawn | |
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It's hard to tell. As said above there were many challenging elements in his "golden age" Dirty Mind -> Lovesexy run, and people were often puzzled. However his challenge was more in redefining pop music, or giving it an odd flavour, than in going avant-garde in the proper sense of the term, except maybe with 16, which was everything but a pop record. The song Crystal Ball, for one, was certainly very challenging (released much later but recorded at that time). Structurally as well as sonically, Parade was a very challenging pop record by the standards of 1986. . Later on he had some more experimental albums: mostly Kamasutra, The War and N.E.W.S. I remember 2 friends of mine, who were totally unaware of anything beyond mainstream pop, being horrified at the intro to East, asking what the hell was that thing that was hardly music at all to their ears. Even among Prince fans it's pretty obvious that certain things Prince has done were too awkward for their understanding of music. . On the other hand I have more and more issues with terms such as avant-garde or experimental: I don't believe they mean much anymore, and probably they haven't since at least the 80's. I listen to a lot of that stuff: ambient, contemporary, improvisation and so on, and fail to see what's more experimental in it today than when it was done by Stockhausen, Miles Davis or Brian Eno in their time. Not to claim that everything has been done forever but in terms of what's going on at the moment, everything has been done and done again so many times that just because one isn't making regular orchestral, jazz or pop doesn't mean they're "experimenting" or being at the "avant garde" at all anymore. There's nothing experimental anymore in making drone music or free jazz after 40+ years of drone music and free jazz, it's just as formulaic as a pop song. Maybe the last truly experimental/avant garde musical movement was the European electronic scene in the mid/late 90's: certainly that led to news ways of composing music, and certainly people like Aphex Twin and the whole "clicks n bleeps" scene, or others such as Björk, Tricky, Bill Laswell or Nils Petter Molvaer (to name a few) were experimenting at the time. Ever since, I don't see anything truly groundbreaking for the good reason that technology hasn't eveolved much in the last 15 years. I don't mean by that that there's no good music being made anymore: there's a shitload of good music in 2017, but nothing esthetically groundbreaking. . So in the end I wonder whether any music is challenging at all, Prince or otherwise. I think music is only as challenging as its listener is musically illiterate. A Lady Gaga or Beyonce song, as ordinbary and formulaic as it sounds to us, would be as disturbing to the ears of a man who's only heard Indian classical music as Indian classical music is disturbing to the ears of an American teenager in 2017. . Therefore, the accurate question would be: "who do you feel are the most challenged Prince listeners?". . [Edited 1/16/17 9:08am] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I like your thinking here! | |
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I don't think of SOTT as a challenging album. Yes, it's different from previous Prince albums, and has a wide variety of sounds, but it is still overall an enjoyable listen. It doesn't challenge the listener with political/religious lyrics, and doesn't have overly-foreign sounds. The political stuff on the album is more "generic" in the sense that it's still hopeful and approachable (in stark contrast to Family Name or Avalanche). The religious content on SOTT is also more approachable and "everyone is welcome" than perhaps a Rainbow Children or The War.
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To me those 2 albums embrace the very essence of what Prince's music had always been, was, and would always be, at its most fundamental level. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Rainbow Children came to mind first. Man, the effort was there on that one, too bad about the JW brainwashing nonsense, that could have been Prince's greatest record since Purple Rain. | |
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Hit & Run Phase 1 | |
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Exactly...thats why i love them both | |
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I agree with you,thanks. | |
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Parade...is the most out of the box Prince Album. ATWIAD is a close second. | |
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A very thoughtful comment Databank. I think that Autechre are still putting out progressive work, but it's easy to become a little jaded when listening to genres in which ceaseless experimentation has become the rule. I do a bit of sound design and make electronic music myself, so perhaps I study what's going on technically more closely than the casual listener. I think that Arca represents a fresh sound (his work with FKA Twigs is great). He has a great melodic and rhythmic sense, but I suppose the uniqueness of his sound comes from his emphasis on FFT-based resynthesis, something which could be seen as a continuation of Autechre's work (and largely thanks to Izotope's Iris in all likelihood). I see what you are saying though – variations on a theme rather than anything truly ground breaking. I've often wondered how aware Prince was of artists such as these (I know that he admired FKA Twigs, but I wonder whether he'd listened to Aphex Twin etc). I always felt that it was a much better fit for him than Hip-Hop and mainstream modern R&B (his minimalism, his elegant musical restraint, his pioneering use of synthesisers etc). I use the trick of gating synth parts to delayed percussion all the time (as heard on “Kiss”). [Edited 1/16/17 18:20pm] [Edited 1/16/17 21:00pm] | |
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Databank has already summed it up pretty well, but it's important not to confuse albums that are challenging and progressive from a musical perspective with the albums that are simply difficult to like for other reasons (RTC and so on). The OP is referring to music that is challenging in the same way that some might consider Miles Davis' electric period challenging, Coltrane's “Ascension”, the work of Cecil Taylor, Conlon Nancarrow, Captain Beefheart's “Trout Mask Replica” and so on. Stuff that challenges your notions of what music should sound like.
As Databank said, it's ultimately just a matter of perspective and exposure. Personally, I think that “The Black Album” was the furthest that Prince ever strayed from the mainstream (in album form at least). “Parade” and “Sign O The Times” would be strong candidates as well, but they remained anchored to mainstream pop forms to a greater or lesser degree. I still find the Camille stuff strange and inspiring. Most of the work that he did between Dirty Mind and Lovesexy was innovative in one way or another. I imagine that 1999 sounded shocking and exotic to contemporary listeners as well. | |
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The Black Album The Rainbow Children | |
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Yeah mostly agree with databank
I think Prince's strength wasn't in creating something entirely new but in pushing where pop could go, what you could actually do with music and still call it pop music, the likes of When Doves Cry at number 1 or even just working on Crystal Ball comes to mind (pity so much of it went unreleased at the time). [Edited 1/16/17 18:43pm] | |
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From an arrangement /orchestration POV, Around The World In A Day. Lots of strange changes and instrumentation choices that were not very "pop" friendly. | |
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Purple Rain | |
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Yes, this is true jaawwnn, but he managed to combine seemingly disparate forms to produce something uniquely his own. You can hear clear references to parliament-funkadelic in “Erotic City” and the “Camille” tracks for example, but they represent a genuine innovation nonetheless (all of that intricate, sophisticated pitch manipulation etc). Of course, I’m preaching to the converted. | |
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