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Owen Husney is on Reddit right now doing an IAMA Welcome to "the org", Mumio…they can have you, but I'll have your love in the end | |
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Here's every question and answer regarding Prince.
There is no real true artist development at the record labels today. Labels want everything handed to them on a silver platter. When the bean counters took over the passion left and if your first album does not sell a certain amount, you're dropped by the label. In the early days, Warner Brothers took great care in nurturing a young Prince. I seriously doubt that Prince would have had 1/10th of the development today that he received over 40 years ago by WB. This is a topic of discussion in my book, Famous People Who've Met Me, if you're interested in reading more on this Q: Hey Owen! Thanks for doing this. I'm curious, what was your first impression of Prince? Did any aspects of that impression end up being particularly true or false as you got to know him? A: The first impression I had was of Prince's great intellect and his ability to absorb information at lightning speed. I have never seen this before or after meeting Prince. Also, his work ethic and dedication to his craft. This became evident after being in the studio with David Z recording his demos. I noticed that Prince didn't just pick up one or two aspects of being in the studio but he rapidly grew to understand how an entire recording session worked from tracking to EQ to the process of mixing music. A: I don't want to speak for what he was thinking, but I can only give my opinion. It seemed like Prince was highly protective of his art and I understood his reasoning and even his battle with Warner Brothers. I have great respect for Warner Brothers and what they did in the early days to help him get on the map. If you're a modern day Mozart, you want to protect your hard work as much as possible. Q: Hey Owen! While you were working with Prince, was there a specific moment when you knew that he would be one of the all time greats? A: Truth be told, I recognized the potential the first time studio owner Chris Moon played me an early demo and then when David Z completed the first professional demo at Sound 80 studios in Minneapolis just before leaving for Los Angeles to get a record deal. Also, Prince would record on my home tape recorder and leave cassettes for me to listen to that would blow me away. No one has ever heard these recordings and I keep them under tight wraps. A: Prince has a terrific sense of humor. We played a ton of practical jokes on people to break the tension of recording. He was also great at sports and could beat the hell out of anyone at ping pong. Q: The public knows Prince as a very shy, timid guy. When you hung out with him, was he the opposite? Was he talkative & the life of the party? Was he great at picking up girls? Was he always out at the club? I just remember celebrities & band members say he is really humorous and fun, yet in interviews he's totally mysterious & quiet. And in his music, it seems like he's a big flirt with the women, but could that just be a persona? Do you know why he wanted to appear one way in public but act totally different in private? Did he tell you why he acted so mysterious? A: Prince was definitely not the life of the party, unless he was on stage. However, he had an excellent sense of humor and was quite talkative once he knew and trusted you. Prince could be so warm and charming that he never had to worry about picking up girls. Mostly they were attracted to him, and that makes me very jealous. As far as Price being mysterious, thats who he really was. To me he was very private but played his life out on stage. People like Prince are never one dimensional, they are like a diamond with many facets to their personality. Just when you thought you had Prince pigeon holed, he would surprise you with another dimension of his personality. Truly hard to define. Q: Hi Owen, What do you think changed the most in Prince's musical growth starting from when you first heard him to his passing? And what did you think of him as a visual artist? Did you ever foresee the guy with the Afro and bell bottom jeans wearing some of the things he did over the years? Especially those riske outfits? A: What I really like about Prince and all great artists is their ability to take you on a journey from their first album forward. Think of the Beatle's "I want to hold your hand," all the way to Sgt Pepper's. What struck me the most, but did not surprise, me was the growth and sophistication of his writing as the years went by. When I saw him at the forum in LA (3 times out of 21 shows) I was blown away with the level of his performance and the sheer artistic magnitude of his writing. To be truthful, he went far beyond what I thought he would become even though I knew he would have an incredible career. With regard to the outfits, really, he surprised us all with the fashion sense since the afro and bell bottom jeans days. its just another example of Prince's uncanny ability to absorb the world around him and take it to the next step. Sorry to sound this way but thats what we call "undefinable magic" you can read more about this aspect in my book. A: Lock her in a room and start out with some of the earlier music on the first album like "Baby" and "So Blue" and perhaps his more sensitive writing like "Sometimes it Snows in April" because thats the most accessible. Don't plop her down in the middle, take her on the journey! Then put on some of his funkier shit and go in the room and dance with her. [Edited 4/18/18 15:46pm] I got two sides... and they're both friends. | |
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THank you for that Dandan | |
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