I have 24 tracks so we might as well fill them up. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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[Edited 3/7/18 0:08am] | |
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dump, dum dumdumdum CLAP = 1000 tracks | |
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Indeed. | |
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Ah ok. Different strokes for different folks. I could do without it. | |
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his only production weakness was wasting his valuable time, efforts, and resources producing exotic girlfriends and side-chicks who had minimal (if any) talent...on another related noted, if truth be told, Mayte was a lousy dancer, as well | |
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soladeo1 said: If any? Maybe the rock-solid sense of belief in himself alone as a producer of his work...only relaxed a little with his last albums with Josh? I would have loved to see what a Prince album helmed by someone like Daniel Lanois or Chris Walla would have sounded like...or Nile Rogers!!! i still wonder what his debut album, produced by Maurice and Verdine White (Earth, Wind& Fire) would have sounded like, if Owen Husney and P would have agreed to those original contract offers... | |
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Hahahaha! This! There would be Prince, knee-deep in writing and recording mountains of brilliant FUNK and POP and BALLADRY, only to pull away from the recording counsul to assist a barely musical L.H.P.O.A (Latest Hot Peice Of Ass) to "sing" or warble" a bunch of tunes that, if left on Prince's plate, would be additional classics...but that sadly left on the latest "Vagina 10" album are total snoozefest duds... | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
I'm using my ears. The song as we know it is basically just piano, bass, drums, guitar and horns. The arrangement is pretty intricate, but the production itself is actually rather minimal. The wooh is on the one! | |
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i could see what you mena with the electras etc.,, but mayte was a pro wasn't she? not that i ever paid a lot of attention. | |
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i still don't know how he had time to juggle all those women, one woman is enough to screw me up and make me non-productive. | |
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was it to get the pussy...as a payback for getting pussy...or trying to help newbies...??? | |
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had to be a combo of things, it wasn't always talent was it? Just the way men are, one of the darker aspects of most of my heroes. Women are a weakness for them. Or rather, I come to think of it as wanton ego is the weakness because usually they just use women to feed their voracious egos. | |
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PeteSilas said:
i could see what you mena with the electras etc.,, but mayte was a pro wasn't she? not that i ever paid a lot of attention. the last part of your statement answered your own question...after all, who couldnt have paid attention to the amazing Cat Glover?...Mayte left no stylistic impressions onstage because she looked amateurish, unfunky, and unnecessary, from a performance perspective... | |
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i guess, i'm not dance expert and never really thought too much of anyone dancing outside of Prince. he wasn't great either but he was good and fun to watch. | |
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I personally disagree with anything having too many layers or being overproduced except for a few tracks on C&D that I think would have been stronger without horns or keys. I fell in love with P's music in the first place because it was overcrowded. Now I can understand that other people feel otherwise, but I guess we love P's music for different fundamental reasons. . Obviously, a producer is someone who provides expertise and a second opinion. Prince had expertise but as an artist it is extremely difficult to second-opinion yourself. It's possible on some records he could have benefitted from such a thing but given that I'm happy with most albums as they are I don't have that feeling too much. Of course, if the purpose had been to remain in the charts at all cost then yes, a producer would have been much helpful, but artistically speaking I think Prince was doing fine overall. The only case where I think he really would have needed someone else's opinion and expertise is Kamasutra, because while containing a lot of good ideas, it sounded like a cartoonish caricature of contemporary music (contemporary in the sense of contemporary orchestral music in the tradition of Western classical music). . Now, when it came to producing other people that was an entirely different matter. Prince wasn't much of a producer: he'd just either shape you into whatever he wanted you to be if you were a side project (which made for great music but unhappy artists), or give you songs that he'd already recorded and leave you to do whatever you wanted with them (as he did with all those artists he gave songs to until 1993). Anything he'd give to other acts was just another Prince tune, but he couldn't adjust to an artist's needs or personality. Hell, even though he didn't even write the tracks, GCS 2000 sounds more like a Prince record than a Larry Graham record!! Things began to change (quite unexpectedly) with Superconductor. While certain tracks are still very typical Prince tracks, some others sound, well, generic. He moved forward with that with Back In Time: it hardly sounds like a Prince record at all, it's again pretty generic nu-soul and, with proper marketing, that album could probably have been popular with fans of Amy Whinehouse or Nicole Willis. I'm not specifically fond of that record, maybe precisely because it doesn't sound so much like Prince, but I have to admit that for the first time in his life, he really did the job and put his skills at the service of another artist's vision, style and talents. I find it all the more tragic that he passed so soon because it seems he was eager to go on producing younger artists and it would have been quite interesting to see where that would have led A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Not necessarily a flaw but he liked to turn everything up LOUD. But if you've got a lot going on track number-wise it can easily become boomy or clusterfucked. Listen to Kanye West's dark twisted fantasy album as an example of overproduction imo.
The world's problems like climate change can only be solved through strategic long-term thinking, not expediency. In other words all the govts. need sacking!
If you can add value to someone's life then why not. Especially if it colors their days... | |
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100% with ya on the keyboard - it ruined Fury, Shhhh, When U Love Somebody, Gold, and more. . Another thing he overused, especially during the Gold-era was the "I don't know how to finish this song, how about a brief solo from everyone!" .
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IDK, I respect Eric and I'm divided on that matter because on one hand I think Lovesexy is incredible because it's such a mess, but on the other hand I prefer the barebone version of The Line. I don't think it's necessarily better than the overdubbed version because that one is also quite awesome, but they both deliver a very different message, which is quite incredible because both have the same lyrics and basic tracks, and I'm more receptive to the original's message. This being said, I don't think the whole of Lovesexy would have worked if it'd been like the original Line. I wasn't there but I don't think it's all over the place because Prince was insecure, I think it's all over the place because Prince was all over the place in his mind. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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after not listening to lovesexy for awhile and then listening to it, it was just like not listening to parade and then listening to it. it was really great it was very dense though and i guess a lot of the horns etc.., were pointless. | |
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Examples of "Endorphinmachine" were given. And while I absolutely have an eternal hard-on for that song, I can also recognize oodles of keyboard layers and the brash tone to it. Live, it's wonderful. On record, it's really good, but it feels a bit like standing in a parking lot of semi-tractor trailers and they all suddenly turn their lights on and blow their horns simultaneously. I'm all for a shock n' awe in music, but at some point, one gets over/de-sensitized to thing like that aurally. The balance of sparse elegance vs thick-like-lava gluttony disappears. In "Endorphinmachine"'s defense, I think it was Jim Walsh who said the scream in "Endorph" and the guitar solo in "Gold" are both Prince searching - hard - for something new in his life (not just his music). It's a man on a mission who gives no fucks.
There's something very "Aerosmith" about this song and yeah, I get the lady boner for this one too. The analogy is (to me) a very precise description. But yet, I think the song needs something more
[Edited 3/9/18 14:09pm] [Edited 3/10/18 7:15am] Style is the second cousin to class | |
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also, personally, i think people are picky, they are picky with food and they are picky with music so most of the stuff people complain about even if i could see they are flaws, they don't take away from the music MOST of the time. As I've said, some of the greatest music of the rock and roll era was recorded on primitive equipement and the stuff holds up fine today it takes alot to destroy a good song and a good vibe on a good song. | |
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[Edited 3/9/18 14:40pm] 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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[Edited 3/9/18 15:03pm] 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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In defence of "The Gold Experience", it requires a very high end audio system. 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 actually like the "overproduced" stuff for the most part and really dig the "layering" that Prince was always adding. I hear new stuff every time, especially with the headphones and most of it works fine. 1999 is a great example. | |
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Same. I posted before I read your post but, yeah. To my mind, 1999 is the best example of this and it was the album that hooked me in. A lot of the songs are structurally simple, especially the funk tracks, but when you smoke a bowl and get some hedphones going you can hear so many other things going on. | |
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Women What are you outraged about today? CNN has not told you yet? | |
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blackguitarist pointed that out, he was right, i never really noticed all that stuff, i did notice how simple a riff 1999 was, very simple, as was the melody. At that time though there was still space and emptiness in the music it gave the impression to me that the artist was alone and isolated and creating an alternate universe, the same feeling I got when I listened to Elvis' sun sessions. | |
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. I agree. In the mid to later part of the 90s, Prince seemed to have lost focus. I did not care for the "Prince Rap" era at all. It did not suit him. He was all over the place.
"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016) | |
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