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The tours that the US didn't get..but wished we did! Looking back...I can't help what might have been going through Prince's mind when it came to touring, I must say, there was some missed opportunties for sure!
anyone else feel the same way? | |
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No doubt the tours were way better overseas... However you have to remember besides 1999 & PURPLE RAIN, all his albums sold better overseas especially in Europe.
Lovesexy for example sold over 2 million in Europe while it struggled to sell 750,000 copies in the U.S.
Sign O' The Times sold just 1 million in USA but sold over 3 million in Europe as well... Even Parade sold better in Europe.
Diamonds & Pearls 2 million of the sales were in the U.S. the other 4 million were overseas. | |
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macaylasdad said: Looking back...I can't help what might have been going through Prince's mind when it came to touring, I must say, there was some missed opportunties for sure!
anyone else feel the same way? In 1994he do a lot of gigs at Paisley and also Glam Slam Miami and also gigs in NYC at Webster Hall that were almost all COME AND GOLD material. Though not tours he was doing gigs here "We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F | |
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Prince suffered from the backlash of the mega selling Purple Rain album/movie and from the controversy surrounding the cover to Lovesexy. That cover was the beginning of those little stickers that were placed on albums that warned parents that their little children might be harmed emotionally by what was inside. I hate to say it but that was pretty much his peak here in the US. His albums continued to sell well here but not as well as they did in Europe. The people in Europe 'got' him while here at home he was looked upon as a sexed up freak for alot of years. He knew he had fans here but he also knew that he wasn't as appreciated as he would have liked to be. The US society has a way of making someone a superstar and then spend years knocking them back down off of the pedestal that we placed them upon. Most artists/singers/actoers only have a shelf life of about 7 years before the public grows weary of them and loses interest. Prince did have alot of missed opportunities in his decades long career but he did what made him happy, not what others wanted him to do. He followed his muse and heart, sometimes to the detriment of his career but he was happy with what choices he made. By doing so he earned respect from many people, both within and outside of the music 'business'. | |
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I don't think he suffered from backlash from Purple Rain... I mean that is what made him a music superstar and cultural icon. Purple Rain is what gave him world wide acclaim not world wide backlash... Parental Advisory stickers didn't harm him or his commerciall aspects, it actually helped commercially, as rebel teen, the majority of what makes up the record buying demographic at the time, wanted those albums with parental advisory stickers on, it actually helped boost sales.
As for Lovesexy, what Walmart refused to carry it, and some record stors would put a brown paper bag on the cover? Still regardless of the cover, commercially Lovesexy wasn't appealing to the Top 50 radio at the time, besides Alphabet Street which hit #8, and as soon as that was over, the album quickly fell off the U.S. charts barely selling 750,000 copies. However it pushed almost 2 million in Europe.
His artistic peak can be debated for another day, but Prince's commercial peak for the time being was with Diamonds & Pearls. You have to remember since Purple Rain, world wide every Prince album went platinum. ATWIAD, PARADE, SOTT, LOVESEXY, BATMAN, GRAFFITI BRIDGE, they all went Platinum with worldwide sales... When you add just those albums up that's over 18 million copies just with those albums, so commercially he was still relevant.
Diamonds & Pearls sold over 6.7 million copies, so commercially he still had clout, as a matter of fact with Lovesymbol album and the three Hits/The B-Sides albums all selling over a million, he had 4 albums after D&P that went platinum... It's 1994 -2003 where he lost almost all the commercial appeal he had, barely going GOLD in USA, and not playing major stadiums anymore for tours... As we all know 2004 was his "final" mainstream commercial peak, with Musicology. The album sold over 3 million worldwide, he performed at the Grammy's, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and his tour was a 100% sell out and grossed over 87 million, making him the highest earning musician that year. | |
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Just yesterday I watched a show he did in London during D & P. Being in the U.S. yeah I'm still butt-hurt over those tours we didn't get here But if he was happy with the choices he made I guess at this point I'm ok with that. It's a hurtful place, the world, in and of itself. We don't need to add to it. We all need one another. ~ PRN | |
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I always felt that not bringing the SOTT tour to the US was a huge mistake.By the fall of 87,the album was really starting to take off.”U Got The Look” reached Number Two on the pop charts,”ICNTTPOYM” followed it into the Top 10...album tracks like “Housequake”,"Hot Thing" and “Adore” were getting alot of airplay on soul/R&B stations,etc.It was as if the album was experiencing new life after a slow start.The momentum was there.That would have been the perfect time for a US tour.Yes,he gave us the excellent concert film but nothing beats the real thing.
.. [Edited 12/30/17 1:19am] | |
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The Nude Tour and the Love Sexy Tour looked like they would have been GREAT concerts to have been able to go to.
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The funny thing is that once he got to Emancipation, the US was where he sold more once again, all the albums after for the most part though not big sellers here, sold much more than overseas. I forget which of the later Prince releases it was but I heard it didnt break 10,000 overseas. "We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F | |
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nonsense, the amazing Lovesexy tour is brilliant. Prince 4Ever. | |
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Yes, Prince definately made a 'comeback' during the release of Emancipation and afterwards. I think he and Madonna both suffered their backlash at the same time. Madonna's was when she released her Sex book, the Erotica album and her infamous 'I'm not leaving' appearence on the David Letterman show, and I think that was around the same time that Prince was experiencing his backlash. I guess people were fed up with having other folks sexuality shoved down their throats daily. You couldn't get away from it.
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Emancipation didn't seel well... It only sold 500,000 but was counted twice for being a 3 cd set there for being certified 2x Platinum by RIAA. | |
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Commercially no he did not make a comeback during the release of Emancipation.
The tour and the album was not a big hit at all, despite all the promotion including the Oprah interview.
Emancipation barely sold 500,000 copies in the U.S. After Emancipation there was no comeback, that was his lowest commercial peak until Musicology.
As a matter of fact after Emancipation he had the lowest record sales in his career with albums like Crystal Ball, NewPowerSoul was another commerical flop, The Vault: Old Friends 4 Sale, Rave Un2 The Joy Fantastic was a commercial flop, and sold miserably overseas, I think it sold less than 20,000 in the U.K.The Rainbow Children, N.E.W.S... All sold nothing. His comeback was from Musicology. [Edited 12/30/17 8:37am] [Edited 12/30/17 10:11am] | |
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Highest selling album:
Purple Rain - 25+ Million
Lowest selling album:
N.E.W.S. - 30,000
"Comeback" album sales:
Emancipation: 500,000 (U.S.)
Rave Un2 The Joy Fantastic: 500,000 (U.S.)
Musicology: Over 3 million total 2 Million (U.S.)
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I thought we were talking about tours. Emancipation may not have been a best selling album, but the Jam of the Year tour lasted throughout 1997 and into 1998 and it was his first large scale tour of the American continent in 10 years and a huge success. It marked a big change in his carreer: from then on, his reputation was no longer based on ground-breaking records, but on his skills as a live performer. | |
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the Sign o the Times tour
and there should have been a LOT of 1985 ATWIAD performances and shows (not at full tour)
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What about the tours the US got and Europe not? Prince didn't tour 1999 or PR in Europe. | |
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