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Did Prince's message really have an impact on the world / his fans? Throughout his life and career, Prince openly shared beliefs and ideas which, as he went against the mainstream flow, sometimes challenged the establishment and made some feel uncomfortable but he was ‘Prince’ and so that was ok. [Edited 11/17/17 6:15am] Life Matters | |
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Maybe his early music attracted a similar, open minded type of fan. For me his whole "Lovesexy" message was his strongest, and most appealing. . Just listening to Dinner with Delores on YouTube for the first time in ages, it's clear how that changed and I think turned people off to any mesaage he tried to give. All a bit judgemental, overtly religious, sometimes sounding racist or homophobic. . Although I'm sure some fans became JW as a result of him preaching! | |
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I wouldn't follow every way he went. Especially not since he became a JW. | |
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Prince is my favourite guitar player, singer, arranger and performer. I love the way he grooved and funked! The most impressive pop-artist ever! But when it comes to his lyrics I must say that TO ME he was mostly saying nothing. But with style. I remember having read an "Around The World"-album review (from back then when it was released). The critic wrote that Prince'lyrics had a "goofy philosophing"-quality. Though I love that album I must say that this guy made a good point. To me Prince's lyrics always sounded good. But great messages? Sorry, but no... NPG Radio:
https://open.spotify.com/...63VlWY6m1A | |
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The question seems odd since you're posting it on a Prince fan site. . His message/music has attributes that reflect all great artists, each of us identify with something personal. After being a fan for so long, his message for me was to love one another. | |
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Life Matters | |
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the tributes fromo conseveratoives and liberals after his passing should answer that.. all the monuments int he world were lit purple that night | |
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well ... looking at this board how people treat him, his beloved ones and each other, complaining about everything, blaming him and others, the tonality, the topics discussed and the way they are discussed, fighting for having a point and the last say ... well ... I'm afraid he didn't reach too many I caught myself beeing pretty sad about that very often during the last months, so I'm glad u asked, cherrymoon. but then again there's so much love for him, so many still missing him and still grieving ... apparently he touched people in a way no one else did. there isn't only one simple answer to your very good questions and maybe before we try to find any we should try to figure out his mission and his main message. was there only one? I'm not sure and I tend to believe the answer's no ... and maybe that's the point: being as controversial as he was and always staying genuine and himself, no matter what anybody might have been saying, writing or thinking about him, keeping the faith in himself and of course god and his believes ... maybe this very obvious and strong part of his personality and of course his work was THE message his entire fansbase could admit to ... cuz everyone could find a part of himself in this message. I personally don't think he tried to open up people's mind to begin with. he just offered what he had to offer - his music. and he did it as colorful and noisy as he could cuz he wanted to be heard and seen. so first of all his message was his music. the more mature he got and the more he evolved the deeper his message grew and yes, as a matter of fact he opened up the minds of those who chose to listen. >>He was the same controversial Prince all along, so what happened that made people’s reaction change? >>Do you think Prince (and other controversial artists) have achieved their mission to open people’s minds? Is it the value of the message contained in their music that enables some people to reach a celebrity status or is it the other way round: that their voice and music are not validated until that firm hand has pulled them up on the fame train (meaning we are not equal). well that's a chicken and egg issue ... guess it goes hand in hand ... reaching a celebrity status (and I guess we're not talking about all those social media and reality show "celebrities" but the "real" ones) needs more qualities than having a message (hint: we all have one!!!) and lots of dedication. but at the same time: no we are not all equal as in we all have different talents and different life-tasks. no one is more valuable or better than the other, just different. but I don't think one can keep a mega star status like prince for decades with an unauthentic message or lack of any profound message, whatever it might be. >>Do you think Prince’s impact on the world (or at least on his fans) was real or just a balm destined to soothe one of the most incurable disease in the world: injustice. what's the difference? soothing of pain (as a result of injustice or whatever) - even the one of one single person - actually IS real impact, isn't it? no one can heal someone let alone the entire world. so soothing is as much as one person can achieve. and he did ... ooohhh he did in so many different ways ... >>Finally, if Prince came back now as a complete stranger (or as he said: ‘as a dolphin’), singing all of these things he sang about and saying all these things that made some feel uncomfortable (including his ‘Slave’ statement), how do you think he would be perceived? this question reminds me of someone around here asking a few months ago if the purple rain movie would be as successful today as it was back then ... all the thoughts he shared, all the visions he had and bold messages he stated were on point at that moment in time ... well many of them were far ahead but they were on his mind at that time ... I guess what I'm trying to say is: dolphin would tell us new things and ideas we are not able to imagine right now.
the only love there is is the love we make | |
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Your question is very interesting but the heart of the matter isn't Prince and his message or impact but the era that both produced Prince and was influenced by Prince. . As a late baby boomer/early Xer, Prince grew-up in a world most influenced by what could arguably be considered one the most radical era of changes in human history: his views, including the religious aspects of them, were deeply influenced by the progressist, sexually liberated, pacifist, equalitarian philosophy that dominated pop culture in the era he grew in. . Then again, Prince impacted a generation of late Xers/early Yers, that was at the same time totally sold into those ideals and desillusioned by how those same baby boomers, their very parents, had failed to truly change the world and "sold out' to the system (in fact they had not failed at all because the world would never be the same, but it was too early for us and we took too many things for granted to realize that). . By the time Prince arrived, certain things still needed to be shaken-up in the sense of "young vs. old", including liberating sexuality in the public space, and Prince among others was certainly instrumental in doing that, as well as redefining the notion of masculinity, advocating women's rights, redeeming gays, showing that religion was not necessarily incompatible with sexuality and a lack of social hierarchy, putting peace above politics and ideology, breaking racial prejudice, etc. . I'd say that today the lines have moved to a more subtle level. A Black man has been the president of the USA so there's little debate about whether "Black lives matter" or not, nevertheless police violence towards Black people and other forms of discrimination remain an issue. Similarly, a women was candidate for presidency and nearly won, but the recent sexual abuse scandals show us that a lot has to be achieved in terms of daily, unspoken oppression towards women. Similarly the debate isn't anymore about whether we should put an end to capitalism but how we're going to make capitalism more ethical in a world of developping countries where, anyway, robots and AI's will soon render work obsolete. . Today, despite the little shake-ups of conservatives such as Trump, Putin or Erdogan, the issue isn't really whether young progressive hippies/punks are going to triumph over old rednecks and conservative bourgeois. They have won. Sex, drugs and rock'n'roll have won. The idea that peace is preferable to war has won. The issue isn't about which values we agree on. It's about how we the people are going to implement those new values most people already agree with, on a day to day basis. . In that sense, I feel that young people today are less rebellious and more practical. They may seem to be less idealistic but the truth is that they just take for granted what we felt we had to fight for, just like we took for granted what our Baby Boomer parents had fought for (and remember that when we were teens, our folks used to blame us for being spoiiled brats who didn't fight for nothing). Kids today are not anymore fighting about whether we should have a better world or keep living in the Middle Ages, they're trying to figure out how to implement the better world we already all have agreed on having. The next generation is going to have to struggle with much deeper philosophical debates such as the very nature of humanity, but that's something else entirely. . So, to get back to your question, if Prince had been born in, say, 1998, and was about to release a contemporary version of For You next year, or even if he'd been born in 1988 and he'd released an critically acclaimed, updated Sign "O" The Times last year, his "rebellion" would probably have moved to a whole different level, a more subtle, more practical and less idealistic, less passionate one. If a young Prince was saying today exactly the same things he was saying in the 80's, his words would probably fall a little flat. Uptown, for example, was a strong claim in 1980, but today it wouldn't exactly reflect a teenager's preoccupation. . Of course all of the above is a quick, somewhat caricatural and superficial assessment of the evolution of Western societies, and I'm open to criticism and corrections, but I think there's some truth in it. [Edited 11/17/17 11:13am] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Yes, but people don't know how to put it into action. | |
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Thank you so much for your very thorough and wonderful responses Lemoncrush19 and databank! As there are many interesting and important points to respond to in both of your posts and I don't want to rush my thoughts or on this, I will have to come back and answer them later. Life Matters | |
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Very true! Life Matters | |
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once again... unfortunately this was due to "Queen" Elizabeth's 90th birthday for most cases ♫"Trollin, Trolling! We could have fun just trollin'!"♫ | |
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yet..if you ask some one...anyone... WHy was the Eifel TOwer or Niagra Falls all lit up Purple on April 21/22 what would be their answer do you think ?
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wrong,, | |
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I think if you ask ordinary folks in the street what happened on April 21st, 2016, they will say they have no idea. And they're likely to say the same if a random person (i.e. not their friend they know is a hardcore Prince fan) ask them why the purple monuments on that specific day. Most people may know who Prince was and that he died at some point 2 years ago, but I don't think too many people remember the date. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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The Prince of 1978-1985? The one who according to the band themselves intentionally formed the Revolution to include black, white, straight, gay, male, and female? The one who attacked critics of his religion and sexuality by essentially saying 'Fuck you, who cares?' in "Controversy"? The one who challenged every norm concerning masculinity, gender identity and sexual dynamics in his songs?
Fuck yes, did he impact me. His early stuff is full of songs that deal with accepting and expressing yourself at your most honest. "Uptown," "Controversy," "D.M.S.R.," and "1999" are all about putting aside superficial differences and loving, living and dancing while you still can, because the chance won't always be there.
I think you can hear Prince's message become less accepting and heading toward an unfortunately more conservative, judgemental direction as early as Lovesexy, but he still seemed to carry some remnants of his former message throughout most of the Symbol era. I think The Truth was the last album where Prince had a glimmer of his earlier edge. | |
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Actually the Effeil Tower wasn't purple at all on that day, it was an old picture. There were many other "fake" pics like that on social networks. The Niagara Falls were purple for the Queen, though, as were several other monuments. A quick Google search can confirm all that. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Life Matters | |
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[Edited 11/17/17 14:06pm] Life Matters | |
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yes. Prince, Stevie Wonder, Black Sabbath (the words of Geezer Butler mostly), Megadeth and MJ all had a great impact on my post adolescence inquisitiveness and spirituality...considering all their unshakable beliefs... in a higher power of sorts...
♫"Trollin, Trolling! We could have fun just trollin'!"♫ | |
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but what I was trying to say is: solving anything in depth resp. healing is something no one can do for someone else. and he did the former far beyond giving us wonderful music. the only love there is is the love we make | |
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Life Matters | |
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1Be careful not to perform your righteous acts before men to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven. 2 So when you give to the needy, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be praised by men. Truly I tell you, they already have their reward. 3 But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing ...though I wonder if more people had known about it at the time, it might have helped break the misconception many non-fans had of him as a superficial person. [Edited 11/17/17 15:11pm] Life Matters | |
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truth.
instead.. we all got the mind of a growing, giving person ♫"Trollin, Trolling! We could have fun just trollin'!"♫ | |
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Life Matters | |
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Thanks everyone! I loved reading all these different insights. Life Matters | |
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Good Night CherryMoon57 | |
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i personally think - No. Prince was complex, the world loved him but honestly i think his message of love and unity gets lost in the details , just my opinion but many outside of our circle see him as just a very talented freaky fuck. purple rain is the one song that endears him 2 people and eludes 2 a human side but the songs people know him for otherwise are simply about the funk, now if u delve deeper then that's where we come in as true fans and know that he was a really deep guy. 4 some reason i believe that he created a persona and stuck with it. I'm just glad that i got it. maybe history will be kind and since he was far ahead of his time maybethe masses will come around and understand and give him his just dues when it comes 2 how much he actually tried 2 send a message of unity in much of his music. | |
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