Thank you – this is great and really illustrates the point that I was trying to make earlier. It was pretty clear to me that the photos only show a fraction of the tapes in detail, with entire aisles excluded. These are police investigation photos afterall. Most of the shelves shown are at the periphery of the room (against walls etc). Couple this with Troy Carter’s recent interview (see comment #14), and it’s clear that we have a lot to look forward to.
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You have to admire how lemoncrush19 (may his avatar b praised through the ages) [Edited 4/29/18 8:16am] 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 bonatoc, are you suggesting that the photos cover more than the diagram suggests? In any case, wouldn't the point regarding the central aisles still stand? | |
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I wouldn't go by photos alone. My husband is a musician, and whereas he (until recently ) kept 3 shelves of hard copies (of various forms) of his work in a storage chamber, the digitized versions of everything he has worked on in his entire life numbers in hundreds of files. Beyond that in a case of a composer as prolific as Prince, most musicians who have ever worked with Prince will be able to tell you that for the period of their tenure, they will have worked on hundreds if not 1000+ songs. Outside of touring, their jobs were to record day in and day out. There's more, alright. | |
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I admit it. Threads like these spread valuable info away from a single thread. Especially with such clickbait titles. It's a loss of time, the only thing there is is to catalogue all of this. Then we'll talk.
[Edited 4/29/18 10:57am] 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 4/29/18 9:38am] 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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the only love there is is the love we make | |
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I think lemoncrush's diagram pretty much shuts down the OP's idea on this one. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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theres 100 purpl rain songs and sheila said they recorded at least 100 songs and the 5 albums from 2010-2015 etc etc ....yeah theres nothing left | |
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The diagram is really useful, but it doesn't give us an answer. . | |
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SquirrelMeat said: The diagram is really useful, but it doesn't give us an answer. This. | |
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Yes, your logic is sound – if there was a wealth of unknown material you’d expect that any given sample would yield new things at a consistent rate. That said, we just don’t know how it was arranged – there may be sections of material that Prince considered complete, others consisting of “unfinished” work, tracks earmarked for use by other artists, thematic sections (musical ideas that he wanted to return to) etc. Of course, there’s a strong psychological desire to believe that there’s much more in there. | |
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It is a bit complicated because a) we do not know when/if Prince started recording music digitally straight to hard drive. Many studios still use tape (DAT) although DAT machines are no longer produced (Sony stopped making them in 2005) and they are hard to get serviced these days. Prince may well have recoded in digital early on (when PP was built?) but he would still have required DAT to record to until at least the late 90s(?) when large capacity hard drives were available. DAT requires a shelf in which to be stored on so would have to be in the vault (or destroyed). 818 were recorded prior to 1994 967 were recorded prior to 1999
Let's presume Prince recorded to DAT until 1999. After that he recored to hard drive. | |
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I asked around during one of the Celebrations as to the Vault. I beleive they said 40 unreleased albums were completed to the point artwork was done. Of course this was likely a ballpark estimate that Prince said. At that time Prince was not recording much but going through the Vault and trying to configure albums as he had too many songs that did not belong on albums. I would believe this was around the time Mayte had P in "studio rehab" and I wonder if it was after the incident she wrote about? She wanted him to slow down and take care of self. I also guess he would shift songs from one part of vault to another if older song was being used on a tracklist. It's like the amount of material that we know about that is not there too. They also stressed at PP that all the live shows etc were recorded and in the vault. The Vault diagram is interesting. I would believe that if Crystal Ball 2 was configured many of the 80s songs are on it. That is if it was ever completed. What are you outraged about today? CNN has not told you yet? | |
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Why don't you consult PV to see how many live shows he did in his entire career and then reduce the number with 11% and add some for good measure?
He said he recorded every single show (probably not true) so that should give you an idea.
However that is most likely as pointless as the other one | |
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that 40 unreleased amount was from th 90's | |
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. I did this because I see a lot of people saying things like "there really weren't that many unreleased songs as most of what we see from the photos are familiar titles". Well, WRONG. What we can see clearly on the photos is just a fraction of the Vault, most of it is blurry so we can't identify the tapes. WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE VAST MAJORITY OF TAPES IN THE VAULT. . I went through all of the published photos and wrote down every single title on the tape boxes that I could read and so far there are 522 tapes listed with some song titles (and an additional 240 or so without titles) on the spreadsheet that I've published. . But to understand how much more the original Vault contained, have a look at the layout of the room. You can see each shelving unit. There are 68 units, each having 5 shelves, so that's 340 shelves in total. . These 340 shelves have the capacity to hold 4080 reels of 2" multitrack tapes, or roughly 10,000 reels of 1/2" tapes, or maybe around 13,000 reels of 1/4" tapes. . As the shelves contained a mixture of 2" analog multitracks, 1/2" digital multitracks, 1/2" analog mixdown and 1/4" analog mixdown tapes, and some shelves didn't have any tapes, I'm guessing that there could've been maybe 7-7500 tapes inside the Vault. . In addition to these 7-7500 tapes, I'm guessing (based on the photos we've seen) that there could've been perhaps another 500 or so audio tapes scattered in other rooms (there were some in the video vault, some on the floor in the trophy room and some on shelves in the garage storage area). And... in addition to these 8000 audio tapes there were boxes and boxes of hard drives, with only God knows how many original recordings. . Of course often there are several tape reels of the same song as first it had to be recorded on a multitrack, then that multitrack was mixed down to a stereo tape, and there are some safety copies as well. But often tapes contain more than one song (a 2500ft tape has a playing time of approx. 16 minutes at 30ips speed), so the bottom line is: what we can see and identify from the photos is just the tip of the iceberg, ONLY ABOUT 6% OF THE TAPES – and we have absolutely no idea how much more stuff the hard drives contain! . So have a look at the Vault room layout: the green ovals show the shelves included in the photos. The smaller green ovals mean that we can only identify a small number of tapes on those shelves. . . By the way: there's a short 1993 video with a peek into the Vault then: it looks like it was already just as full of tapes as it was found 23 year later, while Prince continued to record regularly. . And contrary to popular belief, he didn't entirely switch to harddisk-based recording. He has recorded stuff digitally onto 1/2" digital magnetic tapes in the '90s (he had a 48-track Studer D820 DASH-machine that cost a whopping $270,000 in 1990) and I'm sure he used ProTools too later on, but he never stopped using analog – and it seems like from the '00s he's returned to mainly tracking on 2" analog tape. So my numbers above could turn out to be understatements. .
Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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. Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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. Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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. Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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Photos confirm nothing. | |
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and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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. Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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Interesting to note that on a photo taken on 10 May 2016 (DSC_0252.jpg) you can see a 2" analog multitrack tape labeled as , with a date of 3 March 1998 (I can't read the song titles though), so that proves that Prince continued to record on analog tape at least occasionally during the '90s too, before reverting to using analog primarily from the early '00s. Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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. The photos actually confirm that there must be a LOT of unreleased material, quite the opposite of what the title of this thread says. . Anyone doubting me just please read my long post above (#76) and you'll understand that what we see on the photos taken in 2016 is actually how the Vault already looked in 1993 as proven by the brief video recorded back then. . Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
The Paisley Park Vault spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/zzWHrU | |
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