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Prince's surrendering control to other producers Prince's demise at such an early age cost us many albums (and we are greedy for he gave more than so many artists.
Make the album have happened a few years back (I am not researching the time frames). I just thought it would be worth the creative chance. Just like if Michael Jackson had taken the Pharrell songs that he offered to him before he gave them to Justin Timberlake (senorita, cry me a river, rock your body, like I love you, nothin else, I really like that album) or at least as legend goes. A NIN track with Trent Reznor more NIN style than Prince (Pretty Hate Machine or a cousin of Hurt) A Justin Timberlake track playing of the "Sexy Back rivalry A Questlove track A Roots track A Bob Dylan track (the Minnesota connection) after all "indifference" has a Dylan vibe, or if that doesn't work, ship Dylan's ass out and have him do "To make you feel my love" A David Bowie Collaboration with Brian Eno bouncing things off the wall A crossover country track with a female singer who can write sing and act in a video A Revolution track the reunion A NPG (power trio) lineup A Santanna guitar duel song An Outkast or at least Andre 3000 track A Joni Mitchell, or Kate Bush or Tori Amos track. D'Angelo a son of Vodoo track A P Funk track before Bernie died. Mark Ronson and Amy Winehouse Sly Stone | |
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i don't know, i think he did surrender at many points, sometimes those guys didn't get credit. Producer is a funny, almost catchall type of label. I couldn't even tell you what it is because it really has no hard definition. The most important thing is, when someone had something worthwhile to contribute, he let it in. Dez Dickerson's guitar work on Little Red Corvette, Matt Finks keyboard riff for Dirty Mind, Wendy and Lisa's input on Purple Rain. Prince knew what he was doing. Producers like Quincy Jones mainly are only interested in hogging the glory, not to say they don't do a lot of great work but I don't believe Prince ever needed that kind of figure, he could do whatever needed to be done and what he couldn't do, or rather, what he needed help with, like engineers to run the machines, he could just hire someone. I honestly cannot imagine anyone helping him like Sam Phillips or George Martin did to their respective brilliant artists, Prince knew what to do. | |
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Thanks for the reply. I just wanted to see how Prince used his talents utilizing the songwriting and decisions of others. It is interesting that all of those times you cited, the results were brilliant, for example, Dez' guitar has been named in lists of best guitar solos. The input of others listed by me may have helped him catch that popular ear again just like the Santana Supernatural album. | |
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clive davis did try the santana/supernatural strategy with Prince and Rave, lots of different artists and the results were somewhat mixed critically but I don't think it sold well (I always loved it). Prince, however, wasn't like Santana, a guy who is a one trick pony more or less, he needed a band, singers etc.., Prince didn't.
As for how much Elvis was helped by Sam Phillips, for a guy who was 19 he was a great help finding his strengths. I've read that Elvis was mostly a Dean Martin wannabe at that stage and Sam Phillips and the rest of the trio stumbled upon the rockabilly, it was sam who thought it was special, and it was. Sam also had the equipment, the finances, the business acumen to make it all happen and although he wasn't a musician, he was creative, I remember him saying how he rigged Scotty' moores guitar for Blue Moon to give it that ethereal, clip clop effect and how he did something to jerry lees piano for either "shakin" or "great balls". He was definitely hands on and deserves tons of credit as the musicians do also.
the beatles, I believe that george martin was more or less just a recorder for them in the beginning and got more and more important as the beatles wanted classical musicians or different things like the elizabethan piano part it in In My Life which he wrote, and then, you have to give him credit for the studio trickery he did during sgt. Pepper's and the rest of the psychedelic period, he definitely deserves his credit.
Mj and quincy, quincy's main strength was his social skills, he was a master at getting the most out of a musician and he also had all the connections a guy would ever need because he was such a smooth motherfucker. He was a great producer, I hate to say it because he pissed me off with what he said about michael the day after he died but he was good for Michael at least at the stage where they worked together. The problem was, he was seen as a puppet master and Michael just a singer when Michael had a pretty advanced knowledge and talent for pop music even before quincy got his hands on the music, the rough demos show this. Quincy deserves his credit, Michael wasn't a musician/instrumentalist, he also didn't have those social skills.
How would Prince have been helped by such a figure? who knows, those kinds of guys can hurt as well as help and I really couldn't see Prince working under a guy like Quincy, I read that Shuggie Otis, a guy who was kind of like Prince before Prince balked at Quincy's demands as a producer and lost out on his chances for a real career. Like I say, those kinds of guys can do as much harm as good. Hell, sam phillips locked Jerry Lee under contract for no good reason, a common story in a business where everyone wants to play bigshot. | |
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My concept is that the fact Prince was not a one track pony made the Rave project (which was a win for me but not the public) made him stiffle input from others. He would be contributing to tracks others made rather than others adding bits to his already completed soundtracks | |
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george martin would get my vote out of those guys, he could do what the other guys could do and more. the piano part in in my life sounds like a harpsichord only because he had to tweak it, speed it up to fit it into the song. Just the kinds of stories that Mr. Martin's history with the beatles and he did it all being a decent, humble guy. | |
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