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Just how popular was Prince during the FOR YOU era?? I think the album was met with a lot of positive press and quite a few positive reviews...but just how famous/popular was Prince in 1978-79? Was he a legit musical celebrity? Or a bit of an unknown still?
I wasn't a fan until 1984 or so...
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This is a good question, and this is where are old schoolers are much needed in this forum who were around that time. We can only go off on reviews of the album at the time. Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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He...wasn't? It's relative, but even Prince said people "quietly" knew about him when "Soft and Wet" came out. For You was a soft launch. But For You was a quiet beginning. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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not popular at all... not until "I Wanna Be Your Lover"...i didnt even know about For You, until after Dirty Mind... | |
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I'm guessing that Prince's appearance on American Bandstand on the 26th of January 1980 would have been the first exposure that people outside of the local Minneapolis scene or R&B radio would have had of him. That would have been his first cross over appearance, being on a show beamed out to people's living rooms, and of course Prince very famously or rather infamously may have gotten a little overcome by the experience in the interview with Dick Clark. The vast majority of the audience would have had zero idea who this guy with the high voice, pretty hair, and gold pants was. | |
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I feel like TP matches up with my experience. I started buying records around this time. We had an R&B station in the Boston area and we went to New York several times a year. I may have heard Soft and Wet, but didn't find Prince until I wanna be your lover. Then I went back and found "For You". | |
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I honestly don't recall hearing "Soft And Wet" on the radio back then.The first time I heard a Prince song was "I Wanna Be Your Lover" the next year.It seems like For You did OK for a debut,but it wasn't a major success.Interestingly enough,Rick James released his debut album around the same time,and it was huge. | |
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It was a moderate hit on R& B stations, but not played at all on pop stations. The album didn't get much attention from the music press or the general public, and it wasn't the type of statement album like Dirty Mind to pique the interest of the uninitiated. | |
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As Rev mentioned, location may have had something to do with it. I was a white kid in the CT boonies, and even I heard of Prince. I heard Soft & Wet on the radio occasionally and I was aware of the Minneapolis whiz kid who played every instrument. That location between Boston and NY matters a lot though, with way less division in music, as does the fact that my Dad was a funk musician. But even with all that, Prince wasn't really on the map for young girls like me until IWBYL. It was played often on the radio and I remember being fascinated with the music video showing him playing all the instruments. And the MUSIC continues...forever... | |
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I am not sure, as I am too young but no one had really heard of him in New Zealand at the time. For You was not even released in New Zealand until mid 1984 during the Purple Rain era! . What I do know is that "I wanna be your lover" was a huge hit here and only released in January 1980 as it's counted as a 1980 hit here rather than 1979. We got the American show - Solid Gold, but heavily edited and we did not get Bandstand or anything else here, just our own RTR countdown. . Someone must have promoted Lover, as it became a #3 hit here, it hit the charts at 48 on Feb 17 1980 and then went - 37, 43, 19, 20, 11, 7, 4, 4, 4, 3 (Week of 27/4/80 my 4th birthday!), 6, 7, 8, 14, 20, 33, 38, and out 16 weeks on the chart, nearly going gold. . Yet despite all this success, Prince would not bother out chart again until early 1983 when 1999 was a single hit peacking at #4 and then Little Red Corvette in later 1983 and finally even Doves Cry was only a #2 here, and Lets Go Crazy was bearely Top 10 and Purple Rain got to #25, I would die 4 u and Take me with u missed the chart completely. He was never a huge star here until 1988 and I am sure if you asked anyone here in NZ, other than some university DJ or hardcore Maori DJ or musician, they would have no idea who or what Prince was and automatically assume you were talking about Prince Charles. Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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In Detroit he was quite popular during the For You era. Soft and Wet stayed on the radio and Detroit's ONE and ONLY Electrifying Mojo bumped the hell out of Just As Long As We're Together, My Love Is Forever and I'm Yours. Most of us didn't have a clue of who the hell this Prince guy was but we liked him from the start. I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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I'm fairly certain no one outside of a few rand b stations knew about it. Let's be honest, he wasnt truly on the radar until Little Red orvette broke through. But I'm sure 10 or so people will swear he was the shit when he was non-existant in the eye of the music world. I don't even hear P on the radio now, so I can hardly imagine back then besides some black stations. I think people want to remember IWBYL as being bigger than it was. As far as the Pop world was conccerned he didn't exist, Fleetwood Ma were selling over 20 million records at the time, so was Saturday Night Fever, he wasn't a factor and the album still isn't platinum, I dont think, correct me Purple Zombies, or just a little above a million.
So, not really an era, was it? | |
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[Edited 1/22/18 19:48pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Well, he clearly was since Rolling Stone were reviewing him on his second album. It took him having a hit for them to notice but notice they did. He was clearly intriguing to critics before the general public took to him. On this side of the atlantic he was on the cover of NME by summer 1981, no small feat. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
FACT...Prince was WELL known to black folks immediately after "i wanna be your lover" was released...it was played nonstop on the radio...next album, Uptown was all over the radio, and Party Up, and When U Were Mine also got spins... white radio and TV finally caught on with Little Red Corvette and 1999...but Black folks (especially black women) were heavy on the Prince bandwagon WAY before Little Red Corvette... | |
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And the European audience was eating him up prior to 1982
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It reached number one on the R&B chart and NUMBER ELEVEN on the Billboard Hot 100. It was one spot away from being a top ten hit on the pop chart! And this is before R&B airplay was factored into the Hot 100, so it got there purely from mainstream Top 40 play. It was also a gold-certified million-selling single (in 1980, not after Purple Rain). It didn't position him as a star the way LRC did, but let's not pretend the song wasn't a giant crossover hit. Plus it gave him his first top 40 album. You're making up an imaginary narrative. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Not popular at all until "I Wanna Be Your Lover" came out. That was the first Prince song I ever heard on radio anywhere. I'd never heard of him until after "I Wanna Be Your Lover" came out...and then I mistakenly thought it was a Sylverster song the first time I heard it... "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
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I can only speak for Houston, Texas back in the 70's-early 80's. In those days, it was hard-to-impossible to know what people in New York, LA or Miami were listening to. And vice versa. So my comments reflect Houston, Texas: | |
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I would use concert venue size as a reasonable gauge of popularity. He was playing very small venues until Controversy. I recall learning that he played Burelson, Texas back in 1981 I think. That’s very small! First arena shows happened during the second part 1999 Tour once LRC was on the charts. | |
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Think I remember Cream being quite a big hit in NZ? We're here, might as well get into it. | |
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For You album basically flopped. Disco was at its peak and Prince was too ahead of his time. Soft & Wet single was popular in Detroit and got a lot of airplay. At the radio station they were giving away copies of the album to anybody who stopped by. I don't think Prince did a promo tour because he would have definitely went to Detroit. I didn't care for the album except for the title track and Soft & Wet. After the project Prince was still unknown. Next album was great and they played the album cuts on the radio like Bambi. They also played the extended Sexy Dancer | |
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Interesting. So his special relationship with Detroit goes way back. The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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