It already has. Next question. "New Power slide...." | |
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Live 4 Love ~ Love is God, God is love, Girls and boys love God above | |
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kewlschool said:
I never said Prince's renditions of his music will continue to be mainstream 100 years from now. But because he is an author of music he will be remembered like classic composers. Even Cole Porter fits that description. I never said you said anything, I was replying kind of to every post I'd read in the thread while at the same time just sharing a few thoughts about the topic. Bottom line is I don't know, but I think we can't use classical composers as a reference. Cole Porter OK but Cole Porter hasn't been dead for 2 centuries. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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LadyLayla said: Bonatoc,
I've always admired your prose. It is a feast for the mind. Co-sign A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Certainly it is. | |
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You make some sort of little mistake here. (Don't worry, i won't bully you. ) There are so many stories about classical music. Don't get me started... - First, it's not because music isn't recorded that it can't be remembered. I don't agree on that. And on the other hand, yes, it CAN be different when something is recorded, cause it's 'frozen' in a moment, and we repeatedly listen to that frozen moment, and remember it so well. (some people don't like live performances, as it differs from the 'recorded' version. can you imagine?) But that's way to much to argue about. Forgive me. I'm not an expert for that matter. But i do read some interesting stuff about this. It's a different topic. - But something else; classical music back in the day when it was hot. Let start with the most known example by a composer everyone knows his name. Mozart's Opera's for instance, had the elite sitting in the 'suites' up there (as usual), and the middle section was forseen and packed with the common, lower class (as usual). "Die Entführung aus dem Serail" was an absolute 'common' cloud pleaser and certainly not with the elite, cause it was filled with sex and horny shit. (story goes a little girl 'does' it and looses her virginity with a horny Turkish 'pasja'. Oriental stuff was hip and exotic at the time) It was sang in German, so the 'common' people in Austria (they speak German) could understand it. The elite were not amused because they prefered an Opera to be sang in Italian. Mozart was 26 then, and he played the piano with much amusement to the chants and screams of the crowd. I went wild in there. Many performances were held as the Austrian crowd wanted to see and hear this more and more. Extra performances were held, and all were sold out very fast ! So many stories are known about explicit and controversial performances where the 'common crowd' often decided where a composition kind of went to. Mozart wrote 'Don Giovanni', following to so many (crowd pleasing) incidents, a story about a womanizer (it was all about sex) etc... Sure the elite was always 'up' there. They wanted to be seen by the lower classes as someone who was culturaly develloped and hip with the latest stuff, etc... And yes there were also lot's of complaints by for instance the Emperor of Austria. Then another one, 'Le Nozze Di Figaro', a very risky opera, cause it was a satire about the elite, and the most important elemant in the story adultery by them. Although the emperor forbate the 'french' story in his country, Mozart transformed it into a frenzy and the crowd loved it, while the elite disliked it. - Also the media back then (yes there was media) played a big role in spreading the news. Last example; another Mozart Opera is 'Cosi Fan Tutte'. But this time it's the story of women that went wild, and seduced men (once more 'sex and sex' which became a 'common crowd' pleaser, again). So all these 'controversial' stories/Opera's were the result of the tention betwen elite and the crowd, cause they loved the controversy that Mozart created for them. It made him enormous popular with everyone. Even the emperor had no choice, but secretly like him a lot. - (Other stories of other composers excists too. Too much to write down... I took a known composer...) - But you're right, loads of classical music was played in salons and castles, etc, for a certainly strong elite. But mostly 'classical chambre pieces'. And certainly in earlier times, and even later on. I do agree on that. But with operas, as well as with known classical music performances there were 'common crowd' involvements and responses that led to reactions and influences on writings. Honestly, the elite barely reacted or had big influences (as I come to think of it). Remember Stravinsky's 'Le Sacre Du Printemps', it was scandalous in 1913 when it was performed. (I think it was even recorded - not sure though.) And that's just a classical piece, no opera, but it do had ballet. - And for the rest I totally agree with you on the future of music and how Prince will get an important role or not. I couldn't put it any better the way you wrote it. Excellent ! Personally I think Prince is great. But a genius ? Don't kill me, but I think he was just absolutely great in what he accomplished and did within his era. - And on the other hand I SO can live with what @bonatoc writes. I can be as lyrical when Prince's fine tunes run through my headphones, and when I'm alone. I even shed a tear once while hearing some pumping funk. (I think it was a long steaming rendition of 'Strange relationship (live)'). Which totally is not me.
[Edited 3/8/18 23:39pm] "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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Is this a serious question ? Of course it will. It's Prince. Everything you think is true | |
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Very interesting! I'd say that most of us know the names Maria Callas and Enrico Caruso and are aware of their status. But only very few of us really actively listened to their stuff.
Maybe it will be (or already is) the same with Prince. His name and status remembered, but only a very small part of his music (Purple Rain, Kiss and maybe When Doves Cry) commonly known. NPG Radio:
https://open.spotify.com/...63VlWY6m1A | |
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I'm absolutely convinced that his music will stand the test of time,
Because, like Hendrix, Cream or Robin Trower, there is the musicianship (he was a proficient instrumentalist, and a remarkable guitarist),
Excellent musicians are rare in the field of popular music ; for example there is plenty of excellent guitarists in jazz, classical, flamenco (Tomatito for example), fusion (Steve Vai, Guthrie Govan, Andy Timmons, Shawn Lane, Buckethead, John Petrucci, Mattias Eklundh, Jonas Hellborg, and so on), instrumental music overall (Andy Mackee), but very few in popular music today (there is still Robin Trower, Eric Clapton, but they are at the end of their career ; Paul Gilbert - but Paul Gilbert is at the middle way between rock and instrumental music, Billy Gibbons... not so many anyway).
Prince was always surrounded by excellent musicians, especially the two last decades (Renato Neto - see for example his work on the 2009 version 'in a large room with no light'-, Ida Nielsen, 3ereyegirl overall, and many other ones)
Improvisation, musicianship needs good technical abilities of playing ; a lot of his late tracks have complexity (extended lead guitar playing, a lot of instrumentals with developed musicianship ('PlectrumElectrum' with Donna Grantis,'From the Lotus/Back to the lotus'...), proficient backing bands.
Some of his last tracks with 3reyegirl are enough well-developped and complex to stand the test of time ; personally tracks like 'Midnight Blues, Pretzelbodylogic, Black Muse, Wall of Berlin, Boom, are for me as good as the excellent Hendrix material.
Moreover, we can wait for probably unreleased material of this era.
One last thing, i think the influence of d'Angelo is something that mustn't be neglected on Prince since the beginning of the new millenium ; the organic style of music of 'Hit'n'Run 2 and 'The rainbow children' seems to be directly inspired of 'Voodoo' and 'Black Messiah' ; Maybe i'm wrong, but i don't think a musical gem like 'Black Muse' would have been possible without the music of the excellent D'Angelo.
Anyway, one has to worry about the musical landscape nowadays : Prince is gone, Van Hunt is prolific, talented, but has real difficulties with the business to make his music, and d'Angelo, despite the quality of his music, is not the archetypal of the prolific artist.
[Edited 3/9/18 7:14am] | |
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I reckon the music of the 20th Century will be held in high regard in the centuries to come. Birth place of Rock and Roll. And Prince was at the vanguard of that. He'll be revered for the amazing talent he had. He was constantly surprising us. I still think we have some surprises in store. I just hope we're around to see and hear them. [Edited 3/9/18 2:47am] My password is what | |
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It'll keep itself going. Good music stands the test of time. My password is what | |
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I found your original post to be extremely interesting and so is your reply to mine I stand corrected when it comes to classical music being less "elitist" than I thought it was. I'm not much into classical even though my folks were, so I never really dug the topic. What I meant about music not being recorded (I think my original post is a bit confused/confusing) wasn't that it was necessarily forgotten but that our connection with the music is necessarily different whether we're listening to a posthumous rendition by third parties or to a recording that was made by the composer themselves. I may be wrong, but IDK, to me I can't really "ever" hear those composers' music because whatever it sounded like when they did it is lost forever. I'm not very clear about all that in my mind, more like looking for answers than providing them A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Don't forget it doesn't have to be always about elite performances. [Edited 3/9/18 7:20am] 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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Honey, you got some time there on your hands. Wonderful. "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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Classical is still around. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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If, only IF, he then will be remebered for Purple Rain. - Live ? For me the 1999 tour was the best. Right before the complete PR tour frenzy blew away the masses. Prince was just on the top of his being and still proving it. And with PR he did kind of gambled, and won the biggest attention big time. But for me just right before that, when he was about to lay his BIG EG, he was not only über cool, but unstopable and about to explode. He was still growing big and yet somhow underground-ish. Enough new wave to pop, enough pop to rock, and enough rock to roll up hill. Its when I discoverd him. I was 17. But then i didn't realised it. Now can't get enough of it all, projecting it on my youthful empty mind and foolish juvinile behaviour. A soundtrack perfectly fitting. - Shame we don't see much live video's of the 1999 tour. The bootlegs for sure are all my favorites from that era, even up until the very first live recordings of the tracks that ended up on PR. BANG! - But this is my personal humble longing. Sure people won't remember this era - IF (again, if) they even ever remember him in the greatest future ahead of us. - ...all good things they say, (will) never last. May he Rest In Purple.
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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...but Prince won't be i'm afraid. "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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i really doubt that, none of us will be around to know but I doub that he'll only be remembered for Purple Rain because I've always thought he had a lot of gems that were ignored by everyone when he was alive. The classical composers, most of them were unknown before their deaths, how do we know that that won't be the case for some of Prince's music? I think some of Elvis' best music is ignored too and that might change with time, he's actually had a number one hit since his death. | |
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Albums will stick. Pop rules have, good pop artists get a row of four, maybe five through-the-roof albums. 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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Due to the completixy and size of his catalogue, I think there's a great chance that his music will also generate sufficient scholarly interest in order to remain relevant among scholarly circles (e.g., university music departments). Live 4 Love ~ Love is God, God is love, Girls and boys love God above | |
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Just think in 200 years from now, or 2000 years (what is time in this universe anyway?) - I'm sorry, as much as I love your writings (i really do), Prince as well like most, will possibly be forgotten. He was super awesome, but he was extroardinarely good, but he will dissapear between the unstoppable future, and the never ever stoppable growing pile of future music. - The era of pop and rock still IS very young. what? 60/70 years or so? On hundreds and thousands of years already passing us human kind ?
Maybe, possibly, something of this musical era (I do hope too) will survive and very maybe our Prince will be amongst it. But for now, all is too fresh, too early, to step aside and see on a long term into the future. But history teached us that nothing really actually remains. All things are in a movement of change. Some things will last, some don't. So be it. I have no problem with Prince's music, or pop and rock, or even human kind to dissapear forever one day. Why not. Give it all back tonature, cause we sure know how to fuck things up on this planet, don't we. If a nuclear future (imagine we even needed to create that!) war won't spoil it all. - Aliens might come over and wonder what Music is. Maybe they think it's ear dirt, and can't understand what the hell that was all about, and why it was needed. Yeah, you got me going now. - Back to my coffee and croissant. Then shower and in the meanwhile some Prince tune : I think i will listen to the Contoversy album this morning. -
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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If we avoid Idiocracy scenario in centuries to come, and as a Prince fan i must b optimistic we will - then Prince's music will not just age well, it'll b an essential reflection about this thing called life. Being that music is the most universal language, and unlike other form of arts: painting, writing etc. it will always speak & touch individuals in their search 4 the lost chord. Prince is everlasting now phenomenon. If Christ's teaching is about that phenomenon, Prince was the one who was wlling and able to revive that feelin' -- and let me tell ya, i cant name the artist of our era who is giving the glimpse of that feelin' more than Prince... but 2 much pragmatists 2day, they need to open their dirty hearts:
"Why should you be satisfied with just heaven and earth? When you look around there's so much more to the universe Maybe every shining star, is just another part If you and I could ever open up our dirty hearts"
Prince was always up-2-date 'bout some hot topics -- multiverse in this case.
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[Edited 3/10/18 5:53am] [Edited 3/10/18 5:53am] 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 don't like numbers, but little did I know my SKipper had made that much bucks. 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 suppose it comes down to the themes of the songs universal theme's of love will last and I think his religious songs might be looked back on with interest as in 'oh look what people used to believe in back in the 21st century'. I hope by that time in the future all organised religion would have been disproved or Jesus will have turned up. I'm just like everybody else I need love.....and water. | |
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if and when the estate crap gets settled...does that mean it will free up everyone's interest to release as much as possible for years to come? | |
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ironic as it may seem for an artist so concerned with image, yesterday i was reading of a photo shoot where prince expressed a rare bit of disgust over having to do it yet again and pointed to a group of people who worked for him who relied on him to survive. I was surprised by that, not sure if i even totally agree with that person's impression, which was that he lived to be in the studio and that the rest of it was stuff to be endured, not sure i agree with that but it was an interesting take. | |
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sometimes i think music is what the great artist like lennon said "music of the spheres" or rather music that actually is sort of everywhere and fated to be that way. the great artists often say they don't write their own material that it just comes through them, prince said it too so maybe this music is already everywhere at all times. | |
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My god - almost 200 years old and still incomparable. Sooooo beautiful - this is why Beethoven will live forever. MJ fans may want to check out from 1:07:45 - I didn't known the meaning before. | |
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No | |
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