Amazon release dates for products dating to before Amazon existed are never to be trusted, I did so when I began working on the discography then realized they were most of the time contradicted by other, more reliable sources. August 5 1983 is the release date of the movie, not the OST. In that case where Amazon got the date is easy to figger out, in other cases I have no clue, it's a big WTF because dates seem plainly made up. It's possible RB was impactful in the US, it made no lasting impression in France and I'd never heard of it before I learned about that DMSR edit in 2010, it's a really cool movie though. Now was its soundtrack impactful in the US? IDK but the fact that it was released as an afterthought and without a hit single makes me assume it wasn't, at least not in the way OST's like Flashdance, Footloose, Top Gun or Beverly Hills Cop 1 and 2 were back then. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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imprimis said:
. Amazon is giving an original release date of August 5, 1983. The first 1999 CD release occurred in 1984, if I am not mistaken, as a Japan/obi release. I believe 'Risky Business' was pop culturally significant, in the United States at least, and the inclusion of DMSR is a small case-in-point reflecting the ascendancy of Prince's stardom in 1983 going into 1984. DMSR was never poised to be a single, however, and other markets found no problem releasing abridged albums as '1999 I' and '1999 II'. DMSR seems to have been on the upswing since the mid-2000s. For many years (certainly much of the 1990s/early 2000s), it seemed that Black audiences criticized the song as too long and instrumental, and White audiences as too 'Black'. It's good to see reinforced that this essential song is more staunchly defended and better received these days. It felt missing from the PR Tour, and the Parade/LS-era teases of it were unsatisfactory. . [Edited 2/7/17 12:36pm] -/Are you the spokesperson for black people? Because have been black all my life and I never heard anyone say such a thing. When he performed that sibd on the Musicolgy tour people went nuts both black and white. More org crazy. | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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OnlyNDaUsa said:
something about marvin gay and the kids.... "I like to watch." | |
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dannyd5050 said: What is the last thing Prince sings at the end of the song?
"Why on earth can't you just pick up the phone? You know I don't like to be alone. Why? Why must you torture me?"
That's all I've ever been able to make out.
Anyone else? It sounds to me like "why u wanna treat me so bad". Anyone else hear that? "I like to watch." | |
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Why on Earth can't U just pick up the phone, yeah?
Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
really ? I thought it was "only" 70mins | |
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See this thread: http://prince.org/msg/7/421117
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I apologize for making such a shaky, and unqualified generalization. I didn't mean to offend, or implicate such sensitive subject matter. It was my own experience, one that was borne out dozens of times, that this song was considered quite 'uncool' 1992-2001, even on alt.music.prince and other fa[m/n] venues. I tried hard to get many on board, and was laughed at for advocating this song, even by those of the right age when 1999 was current. This was before ONA, Musicology, and the general mainstream re-embrace of 1980s musical production tropes beginning especially during the mid-2000s. This was a time period where some claimed Love Symbol and Emancipation were artistically his best. Basically too 'New Wavy' and repetitive for something entering into the Dazz Band or Midnight Star area of funk, and not pop enough (and too weird, before Prince was a household name) to make it to a single 1982-1984, and old school was generally treacherous waters, was where the [non]consensus seemed to fall at that time. I do believe it is perhaps the best track on the album; it received fantastic treatment at the Detroit '82 Masonic Temple performance and of course as reinterpreted in Small Club, and was chosen as extended encore to the August '83 First Avenue Benefit Performance for good reason. . [Edited 2/8/17 6:06am] | |
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alt.music.prince Well that tells you everything you need to know. A bunch of square Sir Void of funk people. This song was very popular with young blacks when it came out. Morris Day has put the song in his set because it rocks as a concert rocker. | |
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DMSR was one of my early favorites! That and Just as Long... were my jams! (do they still say that? you know the cool kids... now that i think of it...did they ever?) "Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!" | |
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how..talk about completists....how about the end of moonbeam levels on the bootleg CO2??? is THAT legit ? | |
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I know only of 2 ML: the one on 4ever and the one with the FX sound at the beginning. However I may have missed a third one. There were talks of a piano coda at the end being there on some versions and not on others, not sure what it means as both the versions I have end the same as far as I can tell. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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yes a piano thing with rain fall | |
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On the ancient (circa 1989) vinyl bootleg 'A Better Place 2 Die', ML's coda does continue several seconds longer, with with some trailing piano and that flangy sci-fi synth patch. I'm not certain any other boot has this version, or back-sourced this version (aside from a latter CD re-release of ABP2D), although it was long ago the most commonly traded MP3 'rip' of ML. . The other circulating versions (of which there are at least two, from the obsessive completist's standpoint, including the official release), obviously have been edited to fade out slightly earlier. . The track seems more haunting and reflective with the added length to its coda, and would have been a good way to end a side of an LP, if this had made 1999. If the song were wedged between other tracks, perhaps the edit would be more sensible. . Allegedly intended at one point to be sequenced after or segue from 1999 (where 'Little Red Corvette' is now placed), but that claim seems to be mainly on account of the 'nuclear theme' and that beginning white noise patch (which resembles the 'bomb blast' at the ending of 1999-- but he also uses it on 'Automatic', 'International Lover', the opening to 'Purple Rain' album version, 'The Belle of St Mark', 'Crystal Ball', etc.), although it would probably work thematically and one shouldn't rule it out the possibility that it was configured that way at one point. .
[Edited 2/8/17 2:28am] | |
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