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If you're looking for a moment when Prince may have "jumped the shark", or at least approached the ramp, I would suggest that the rapping in "Graffiti Bridge" is when it happened. . On "The Black Album", the song "Dead On It" was his criticism of rap, denigrating the genre as being something that one didn't need talent to do. Then 2 1/2 years later, he's lacing his music with actual rapping.
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My terrible bad. Excuse me. Fair point. I would contend, however, it is an attempt to capture the live performance of the song as it would have been rehearsed and performed and thought an idea worthy enough to put together as the video for the single. That said, you're right that it recontextualises the use of the Game Boyz in this instance. And, perhaps, makes the decision not to include them in the live show an affirmation of Prince's concept for Lovesexy as a whole and their appearance here as throwaway. If that's the case, I wonder why have them there at all.
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Fair point well made about Eric and Atlanta and the strings and the lack of Boni. It was an odd choice for a single, yes; though, like you, I adore the song itself. | |
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I appreciate your ideas and considerate/thoughtful tone as well. It's always nice to exchange differing ideas about Prince with someone without it devolving into name calling. Thanks for the discussion.
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Agreed. | |
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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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The visuals are lovely. The tune is meh... Simple. | |
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I think the OP is off base. Over time the GB have not been associated with the legacy of Lovesexy, it's success or 'failure' (stateside says some). Its a detail only diehards are even aware of. The gun mic and Tony M are examples of where he tried too hard to connect wth the hip hop aesthetic that was expanding within pop culture and I wouldn't even characterize that as trend chasing, but instead a newfound respect that led him to embrace the genre, with mixed (mostly bad) results. IF the MTV performance was indeed self parody, it was lost in the masses and definitely bit him in the ass. Certain friends constantly referenced it in our music debates as a (irrelevant) means of discrediting him | |
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Prince only contributed 5 songs to Sheila E. and 2 to Taja Sevelle. Great tracks, mind you, but he had nothing to do (as far as we know) with the rest of those records. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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I adore the Lovesexy musicvideos... wow excellent stuff... Prince 4Ever. | |
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It's not that they are associated with Lovesexy, it's the moment when you think "ah, ok, something's not right here." That realisation.
Perhaps it's a hindsight thing, knowing what happened next, and I've revising my view, distorted by Game Boyz glasses... It's interesting you mention a "new found respect" in your comment. To my eyes, the Game Boyz represent all that was hackneyed about rap and hip-hop and the exact charateristics Prince mocked on The Black Album. There doesn't appear to be much "affection" in the manner of the Game Boyz - not to these eyes, anyway. | |
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Actually the type of rap the Game Boyz represented was called entertaining which is the exact opposite of what we have in rap today.
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How do you mean? | |
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