Controversy of a Dirty Mind: Deifnitive Early years (cheesy title but idgaf) 1. Strange Way 2. American Jam 3. Hard To Get (1981 version ft Andre Cymone) 4. When The Shit Comes Down 5. Jealous Girl (Original 81 version) 6. Kiss me Quick 7. There's Something I Like About Being Your Fool 8. If It'll Make U Happy 9. Fox Trap 10. You're All I Want until then i'll pretend this fuchsia light is god... | |
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I have always gotten the impression that the boot is an unfinished take on the song and that somewhere in the vault there is a whole lot more to it. It also fades out rather abruptly implying that it may go on for longer too if there is a finalised version of it somewhere. | |
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. [Edited 5/24/17 4:39am] | |
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Thank you. I'm 100% with you on that one A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Anything Ive never heard. | |
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That gets my vote as well. Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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People have different musical tastes. Just because you love his entire career doesn't mean that everyone should and if they don't they've commited some kind of sin. U fall in love 2 fast and hate 2 soon
And take 4 granted the feeling’s mutual | |
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True. I think however that intolerance invites intolerance. Too often do I read here "X is crap/great" or "X is a terrible/good album/song" and too rarely things like "I don't like X but I respect the fact that it's an interesting song/album, it's just not for me", or "I think X is a masterpiece because...". "I like/dislike X" is expressing taste. "X is great/X is shit" without further explaination is expressing an opinion while trying to disguise it as a fact, which is a sin in some people's book. Now people can do what they want, we're all different, but I've recently come to realize that here you have a lot of different people with a lot of different cultural backgrounds, lifestyles, personalities, education, values, etc., and that the only thing that makes many of us end-up chatting in this virtual room is our taste for Prince's music, and for some of us not even all of it. This enough is the source of a lot of tensions and misunderstandings, because if not for Prince, certain people here would never talk to each other if they met in real life. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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. The thing is: popular music (and popular culture in general) is always expected to be revolutionary, creating new trends – and that is certainly one of its important values. But people naturally calm down as they age so artists gradually lose their interest in setting trends too. They learn that there is so much more to art than just trying to be different in the eyes of the masses. You can grow without being a rebel too, in fact you slowly realise that it can be far more satisfying to explore the depths of your talent and fine-tune your artistic skills than to get to the top of the mountain again. (He said it: "I've been to the mountain top and it ain't what you say"...)
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Again, I agree with everything. I turned one of the best skilled musicians I know into a Prince fan by playing him Newpower Soul back in 2000 or 2001, when he was familar with the hits and had never really bothered. . To add to everything MicElfAgain said, from a creative perspective (and I should know, having been at it for 25 years or so), there's a natural limit to how much you can, and want to push yourself as an artist. There comes a time when, after experimenting with many themes, formats, styles and palettes, you kind of find what you like doing the most, and tend to stick to it. Nearly all artists in all disciplines do that at some point. You have established a frame of sorts, that defines the boundaries of the territories you are willing to explore, and you have filled in a toolbox that contains the tools you have mastered to explore said territories. That would be Prince from 1996 on. And then of course every once in a while you get bored, you snap, you try something different (that would be Kamasutra, The War or NEWS...) or you reexplore certain things from your youth with a more mature perspective (that would be Mpslound or 20ten). And of course there's a temptation to follow new trends every once in a while because you see the new blood coming with fresh stuff, and you just need to prove (to yourself if not to the world) that you can do that, too, and that you haven't lost your connection to what's going on the the world (that would be D&P, Rave or Phase One). But most of the time you just do what you do. And whatever people may think of it, there's a "this is what I do, period" statement that's there in your mind, a statement beyond "good" and "bad" and "innovative" and "derivative", it's just the way it is and anyway, whatever you do, you'll always be derivative of yourself after a certain point. . So in the end you grow, you mature. There are certain things that you have achieved that you won't ever achieve again. But on the other hand there are things you now achieve that you wouldn't have been able to achieve in your 20's (TRC, Lotusflow3r or HitnRun Phase 2 are records Prince couldn't possibly have recorded in 1985, because he wouldn't have known how to). . To make a long story short: I'd say you're much more in charge than you used to be, but maybe a little less spontaneous. . Obviously, the creative process is much more complex than that, you could (and some have) write whole books about it so I won't deny that all of the above is ridiculously reductive, but it's nevertheless what I'd call an artist's perpective on another artist's evolution, which is very different from a consumer's perpective. Clearly, from a consumer's perpective (your primary impulse is to evaluate), P's career reached its most interesting moments in the 80's. From an artist's perspective (your primary impulse is to understand), it's much more complex than that, and not necessarily true. Professional critics and scholars are somewhere in the middle, their role being at the same time to understand and evaluate. . We're getting a little off-topic here though, but the whole point is that, to some of us, the vault's content is as interesting after 1990 than before. . There's also the whole argument about whether certain people here really like Prince's music, or whether they just like a certain era of it (which is entirely different IMHO), but I won't go there because each time I do people get offended and start calling me names. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I don't doubt they would for a second. I keep saying that if D'Angelo or Maxwell had released any of the records P has released in the 2000's, critics would have raved instead of writing "good but not as good as SOTT" in each review. . When NEWS was released at a time when I was myself still a musician (I quit and focused on writing soon after that), and after years of being mostly a funk and pop and electronic music listener, I was in the middle of an intense Bill Laswell phase (Laswell has released hundreds of experimental records, playing with the best musicians, toying with nearly every possible genre you can think of from classical Indian, Chinese, African or Arabic music to drum'nbass, dub, ambient hip-hop, free jazz, rock, you name it...). When I first heard NEWS, particularly the intro to East, I was like "whew, this is it, awesome, Prince is going Laswell! Yeah!!". To some, it was muzak, to me it was one of P's most daring records, one where he really dared go outside his comfort zone. And I was blown away by the musicianship, of course, but also by the power of the narrative (the album is very narrative, it does tell stories about those 4 directions/continents it evokes, and the people who live on them). . I can't blame people for not "getting it", there are masterpieces that I don't "get", don't "enjoy". Hell, Proust and Joyce bored me to death and I've never manage to finish those books. To me it's crap. Only I know it's not. And I have the sense to acknowledge that I'm missing something, that there are brilliant things in certain books, movies or records that's can be denied, that I can see even, but it's not for me, not enough for me to trip on them at least. Maybe one day i'll finally get it and be able to give those books another shot... A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Wonderful post, i agree with you on everything | |
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I wouldn't choose 10 tracks. For me, (the first release full of previously unreleased material) I think this unreleased project would be good as a next vault release. Crystal Ball 2, the 2 disc compilations of unreleased recordings from the vault. It's nearly 20 years since the release of the Crystal Ball compilation. The sequel was going to go a little deeper into the vault and give the fans more of what they've wanted. If not that, maybe a 10-12 song compilation of unreleased recordings ranging from the second half of his career (1996-2016). | |
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