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Deliverance EP appreciation thread It's been on my shuffle lately and I can't help but think it's some of Prince's best material. I'm not sure anymore of the story behind why it was recorded with this person or the ultimate intentions for the songs. But they are so stellar. For me, it lacks the flattened acrylic production he adopted in the aughts and beyond. There's a band-recording feel to it, an openness and genuine vibe throughout the tracks. What do you think its future will be in Princetory? Will it see a more proper and fully realized release (ie: as part of a larger intended set), or will it be forever what we know it as right now? Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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You do realize P is only on lead vocals and some guitar right? | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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The title track is great. Probably one of the very few songs I've genuinely liked since the Lotus era, and I don't care if it's a little or all Prince playing. Would've been cool if he'd kept it on Lotus or replaced The Morning After with it on the digital version. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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See the affidavit regarding what Boxill did to the tracks. https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/3673521-Affidavit-Boxill-Notarized.html
No one should do what he did, by just "feeling" it.
Hopefully we will hear the original tracks at some point, with the original chorus with the Twinz (Mathieu Bitton confirmed he has or heard the original version, so they could be out there). | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I love it and find it moving. | |
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Does anyone know the history of how this project came about? It’s so different from his work style. I also think it is very interesting musically...I Am is the jam. | |
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Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture! REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince "I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben |
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The Deliverence EP has the originality and vitality of his best work. It makes me wonder what else is out there! | |
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TrivialPursuit said: It's been on my shuffle lately and I can't help but think it's some of Prince's best material. I'm not sure anymore of the story behind why it was recorded with this person or the ultimate intentions for the songs. But they are so stellar. For me, it lacks the flattened acrylic production he adopted in the aughts and beyond. There's a band-recording feel to it, an openness and genuine vibe throughout the tracks. What do you think its future will be in Princetory? Will it see a more proper and fully realized release (ie: as part of a larger intended set), or will it be forever what we know it as right now? —— Sorry this music was stolen and altered by an engineer. Ian had no business putting his mitts on this music. Maybe the estate will put it out one day but just the fact that Ian messed with the tracks puts me off. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
—Well That is the problem with the whole project | |
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Maybe by his association with Lenny, Dave Chappelle, Chris Rock, and others? | |
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Mathieu Bitton - he claims he did some work for Prince so he may have heard when he was working for him. | |
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i agree | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
I was just saying...if people give that stuff credit...it’ll only be a matter of time before Skeleton song fragments are being finished by others. Usually Prince fans don’t want others touching his stuff. | |
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luvsexy4all said:
i agree Yet, it wasn’t out there. Taking a fragment and finishing it after he died doesn’t make it a vault track. It’s a Boxill track featuring Prince. Fact love it or hate it, but be careful what you wish for. | |
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Princevault says they are overdubbed unofficial remixes of the actual songs. Just wait till the Pharrell Williams Remix of Rebirth of The Flesh...lol. Don’t think that’s too far fetched. | |
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if u take his voice and gutiar playing from the tracks..u still have his greatness | |
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Interesting reading both sides of this coin. [Edited 3/14/18 13:29pm] | |
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luvsexy4all said: if u take his voice and gutiar playing from the tracks..u still have his greatness Lol...so true. We have such crazy expectations of his multi-talented rare genius. Springsteen, Beyonce, MJ, Bowie, etc have all had top producers, session musicians, writers, soundsmiths throughout their whole careers. | |
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I think the whole thing is great, and up there with his best, and I’m glad it was released in time to commemorate his passing a year later. In my head, the band is the Cora/Josh configuration but maybe that’s false. Whoever it is, they’re killing it in all aspects. I don’t think it sounds like anything but Prince music (from the F.U.N.K. era), so anything Ian did to the tracks is tasteful, and in line with what Prince would do. "That's when stars collide. When there's space for what u want, and ur heart is open wide." | |
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I like the whole thing, sounds great. RIP | |
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ISaidLifeIsJustAGame said:
Maybe by his association with Lenny, Dave Chappelle, Chris Rock, and others? Actually, it has nothing to do with any of my friends/collaborators that you listed although they were all friends with Prince. I actually got some CDs back in 06 that were early configurations of Lotusflow3r, Planet Earth and 3121 when I was working on Ultimate, When 2 R In Love and some other secret projects. Of course I’ve never copied them but I can attest to the fact that Boxil did overdubs on the original tracks but those are Prince’s tracks on Boxil’s version. He just added background vocals and some keyboard strings and things. Hope this helps. [Edited 3/14/18 22:14pm] | |
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If (and I say "if" as I cannot verify this) Ian Boxill indeed co-authored and co-arranged the songs he has a certain legitimacy when it comes to "finishing" them, in the sense that they're as much "his" as Prince's, even if Prince legally owned the masters from the fact that he paid for the sessions and that Ian was contractually tied to him as a session musician. In that sense, the "finishing" would be more legitimate than any posthumous remix. . Regardless, as a Prince fan, I'd rather hear the tracks as Prince left them, because it is quite uncertain that he'd have approved of those final mixes as they are, and I want his work to be left untouched. In a similar way, I wouldn't like the Revolution or any past bandmembers to "finish" vault tracks even if they co-wrote or co-arranged them. But if Boxill is really co-author, I can understand his perspective as an artist: it's, after all, his work too. [Edited 3/14/18 22:30pm] A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Clearly that was Boxill’s strategy: to demonstrate through the affidavit that he had contributed equally to the creative work. databank said: If (and I say "if" as I cannot verify this) Ian Boxill indeed co-authored and co-arranged the songs he has a certain legitimacy when it comes to "finishing" them, in the sense that they're as much "his" as Prince's, even if Prince legally owned the masters from the fact that he paid for the sessions and that Ian was contractually tied to him as a session musician. In that sense, the "finishing" would be more legitimate than any posthumous remix. . Regardless, as a Prince fan, I'd rather hear the tracks as Prince left them, because it is quite uncertain that he'd have approved of those final mixes as they are, and I want his work to be left untouched. In a similar way, I wouldn't like the Revolution or any past bandmembers to "finish" vault tracks even if they co-wrote or co-arranged them. But if Boxill is really co-author, I can understand his perspective as an artist: it's, after all, his work too. [Edited 3/14/18 22:30pm] | |
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What I'd like to see is the actual copyright notice and registration date: were the songs copyrighted during P's lifetime and, if so, were there copyrighted as a collaboration, or did Boxil copyright them as such after Prince passed? Since Prince left ASCAP IDK where to look online for a complete list of his copyrighted songs, but the fact that Princevault says Prince is sole author may indicate they've checked, IDK. A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/ | |
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Thanks for the info. Out of curiousity I'm guessing Prince's tracks were finished and not demo like? And if they were finished were Bohill's overdubs/additions massively noticeable? | |
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