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Reply #510 posted 06/11/18 9:05am

wonderboy

I would have stopped being a Prince fan long ago had it not been for bootlegs. Some eras just did not interest me at all but during those times I still had waves of bootlegs coming my way, most of which I did not have to pay for. Traded for free.

I still bought all of his official stuff and will continue to, again, thanks to bootlegs for keeping me interested.
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Reply #511 posted 06/11/18 9:22am

SchlomoThaHomo

avatar

The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick

"That's when stars collide. When there's space for what u want, and ur heart is open wide."
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Reply #512 posted 06/11/18 9:27am

KingSausage

avatar

NorthC said:

KingSausage said:

Another point regarding the people who are all whining “but but but Prince didn’t want us to buy bootlegs blah blah fucking blah” — Prince also said he didn’t want people to buy The Black Album. I’m guessing most of those Whiny MFs own a copy of The Black Album. As they should, because it’s fantastic.

As you know, the Black Album was officially released, so ever since 1994, it doesn't really count as a bootleg anymore.



Of course. But I’m not talking about its official vs bootleg status. I’m just talking about people who say “Prince didn’t want fans to _____” like it’s the 11th Commandment or something.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #513 posted 06/11/18 9:28am

KingSausage

avatar

SchlomoThaHomo said:

The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick




Yep. THIS. And pretty soon the public will stop paying attention.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #514 posted 06/11/18 9:46am

Strive

SchlomoThaHomo said:

The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick




It's kinda funny because I read an explanation on a third party site that helped explain the relevance of this release. If Warner would have included a history lesson for those less informed, it would've been less of a ??? moment.

Still a stupid decision to release this over a collection of studio outtakes but it wouldn't have been as stupid.
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Reply #515 posted 06/11/18 10:02am

databank

avatar

SchlomoThaHomo said:

The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick

I think we'll see if their bet was a good one when we read the reviews in the music press.

.

Most critics probably won't know (or mention) that we're talking of a classic bootleg, and most people in the general public won't ever know either. So that won't be much cause for debate outside of the Org.

.

Again, remember how PR Deluxe was received: praise, praise and more praise. There wasn't a single reviewer (that I know of) to talk about any of the issues on it, not even the glitch on EC (which would have been the most visible issue for non fans).

.

It may sound puzzling to us because we have hard drives full of soundboard live shows, mindblowing outtakes and incredible rehearsals, many of them in pretty good if not excellent sound quality.

.

But objectively, for this majority of people who are not spoiledlike us, including reviewers, this is gonna be a cool little record showcasing a rare, intimate side of Prince playing relatively accessible music. I'm pretty sure my GF will love it. I'm pretty sure anyone who likes Prince a little and cares for an R&B singer and a piano will like it. It's just like a whole record in the vein of HCUDCMA, and who doesn't like HCUDCMA?

.

So yeah, it's a puzzling decision at first but when you think of it, it's not crazy like, say, if they released "Prince's original vocal versions of the Carmen Electra album". And another factor, I suspect, is that it's a cheap, quick and easy option: there isn't much to restore, no tracklist to think about, no mixing to do, no baking tapes or whatever: just take the cassette, clean it a little, master it and here you go: we have a 35mn long new album, ready to go!

.

Like I said, let's wait for the professional reviews: I may be wrong but I bet it's gonna be praise, praise and more praise.

[Edited 6/11/18 10:03am]

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #516 posted 06/11/18 10:30am

deebee

avatar

databank said:

I think we'll see if their bet was a good one when we read the reviews in the music press.

.

Like I said, let's wait for the professional reviews: I may be wrong but I bet it's gonna be praise, praise and more praise.

[Edited 6/11/18 10:03am]

Why should that be the main metric for deciding on the success of this (or any other) release? I can understand looking at sales, because there's a incontestable commercial logic to that. And I can understand going by fans' and ordinary listeners' feedback, because that's ultimately the point of a music release. But why on earth should what paid reviewers think matter more than either of those?

There are many reviews these days that say little contentious and regurgitate the press release. The 'quality' music press is more discerning, and I often enjoy reading reviews. But still, what does it matter?? After all, it'd be peculiar for anyone to say: "Well, I don't think much of it myself, and it tanked on charts, but Rolling Stone gave it five stars!"

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #517 posted 06/11/18 10:32am

IstenSzek

avatar

databank said:


And another factor, I suspect, is that it's a cheap, quick and easy option: there isn't much to restore, no tracklist to think about, no mixing to do, no baking tapes or whatever: just take the cassette, clean it a little, master it and here you go: we have a 35mn long new album, ready to go!



to me it feels like, and i hope i'm right on this, as if they are going through the vault,
cataogueing things, possibly already mastering certain things, figuring out what song
would go with what album reissue in regards to time recorded, personell invovled etc.

and then things like this rehearsal pop up amongst those tracks and they feel special
and intimate and quite magical i suppose to someone who hears them for the very first
time.

and because it doesn't cost much and because it can be cleaned, matered and put on
a cd relatively quickly, they chose to put it out there for everyone to hear and enjoy.

so in that respect i fully understand what they're doing now. IF it's just a way to put a
release out there whilst they are working on the bigger picture behind the scenes.

that way it's actually a bonus release, in my eyes. something to keep his music in the
public eye and keep some momentum moving forward to what will be the ultimate
prize; reissues stacked with bonus material and later actual full albums that prince'd
compiled and filed away.

so i'm not that pissed off anymore. i guess it's just a waiting game. let's see if they're
going to start trickling out information about reissues toward the very end of the year.

i'm guessing they will.



and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #518 posted 06/11/18 10:36am

deebee

avatar

IstenSzek said:

databank said:


And another factor, I suspect, is that it's a cheap, quick and easy option: there isn't much to restore, no tracklist to think about, no mixing to do, no baking tapes or whatever: just take the cassette, clean it a little, master it and here you go: we have a 35mn long new album, ready to go!



to me it feels like, and i hope i'm right on this, as if they are going through the vault,
cataogueing things, possibly already mastering certain things, figuring out what song
would go with what album reissue in regards to time recorded, personell invovled etc.

and then things like this rehearsal pop up amongst those tracks and they feel special
and intimate and quite magical i suppose to someone who hears them for the very first
time.

and because it doesn't cost much and because it can be cleaned, matered and put on
a cd relatively quickly, they chose to put it out there for everyone to hear and enjoy.

so in that respect i fully understand what they're doing now. IF it's just a way to put a
release out there whilst they are working on the bigger picture behind the scenes.

that way it's actually a bonus release, in my eyes. something to keep his music in the
public eye and keep some momentum moving forward to what will be the ultimate
prize; reissues stacked with bonus material and later actual full albums that prince'd
compiled and filed away.

so i'm not that pissed off anymore. i guess it's just a waiting game. let's see if they're
going to start trickling out information about reissues toward the very end of the year.

i'm guessing they will.



yeahthat

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #519 posted 06/11/18 10:37am

databank

avatar

deebee said:

databank said:

I think we'll see if their bet was a good one when we read the reviews in the music press.

.

Like I said, let's wait for the professional reviews: I may be wrong but I bet it's gonna be praise, praise and more praise.

[Edited 6/11/18 10:03am]

Why should that be the main metric for deciding on the success of this (or any other) release? I can understand looking at sales, because there's a incontestable commercial logic to that. And I can understand going by fans' and ordinary listeners' feedback, because that's ultimately the point of a music release. But why on earth should what paid reviewers think matter more than either of those?

There are many reviews these days that say little contentious and regurgitate the press release. The 'quality' music press is more discerning, and I often enjoy reading reviews. But still, what does it matter?? After all, it'd be peculiar for anyone to say: "Well, I don't think much of it myself, and it tanked on charts, but Rolling Stone gave it five stars!"

Well, usually the 2 metrics for the success of any work of art is usually sales and critical response.

Fans and ordinary listeners' feedback are more difficult to measure.

For movies now Rotten Tomatoes allow regular folks' reception to be measured (to some extent, because not everyone votes and the vocal majority might in fact be a minority), and I guess there must be sites allowing audience ratings for music as well, but IDK if any is popular enough to weight in.

[Edited 6/11/18 10:38am]

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #520 posted 06/11/18 11:34am

paisleypark4

avatar

SchlomoThaHomo said:

The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick

Right nod

I mean Wonderful Ass, We Can Fu** and Possessed are in much higher quality than this...I can see this being a bonus release with a 1999 Remaster but...mmm..

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #521 posted 06/11/18 11:44am

NorthC

deebee said:



databank said:


I think we'll see if their bet was a good one when we read the reviews in the music press.


.



Like I said, let's wait for the professional reviews: I may be wrong but I bet it's gonna be praise, praise and more praise.


[Edited 6/11/18 10:03am]



Why should that be the main metric for deciding on the success of this (or any other) release? I can understand looking at sales, because there's a incontestable commercial logic to that. And I can understand going by fans' and ordinary listeners' feedback, because that's ultimately the point of a music release. But why on earth should what paid reviewers think matter more than either of those?

There are many reviews these days that say little contentious and regurgitate the press release. The 'quality' music press is more discerning, and I often enjoy reading reviews. But still, what does it matter?? After all, it'd be peculiar for anyone to say: "Well, I don't think much of it myself, and it tanked on charts, but Rolling Stone gave it five stars!"


That's sorta what happened to Prince in the early 80s: he didn't have big hits, but be was praised by the music press and that surely helped to build his reputation. And I agree with data that this release will probably get good reviews and there might even be a few journos who know that it was an old bootleg. Plenty to write about.
But of course, like record sales, the influence of the music press isn't what it used to be.
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Reply #522 posted 06/11/18 11:49am

NorthC

paisleypark4 said:



SchlomoThaHomo said:


The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick



Right nod

I mean Wonderful Ass, We Can Fu** and Possessed are in much higher quality than this...I can see this being a bonus release with a 1999 Remaster but...mmm..


Why does everyone go on and on about a 1999 remaster? Fuck that. I don't want it. I already have that album. That's one good thing about this upcoming release: at least I don't have to buy an album I already own to get it.
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Reply #523 posted 06/11/18 12:19pm

deebee

avatar

databank said:

deebee said:

Why should that be the main metric for deciding on the success of this (or any other) release? I can understand looking at sales, because there's a incontestable commercial logic to that. And I can understand going by fans' and ordinary listeners' feedback, because that's ultimately the point of a music release. But why on earth should what paid reviewers think matter more than either of those?

There are many reviews these days that say little contentious and regurgitate the press release. The 'quality' music press is more discerning, and I often enjoy reading reviews. But still, what does it matter?? After all, it'd be peculiar for anyone to say: "Well, I don't think much of it myself, and it tanked on charts, but Rolling Stone gave it five stars!"

Well, usually the 2 metrics for the success of any work of art is usually sales and critical response.

Fans and ordinary listeners' feedback are more difficult to measure.

For movies now Rotten Tomatoes allow regular folks' reception to be measured (to some extent, because not everyone votes and the vocal majority might in fact be a minority), and I guess there must be sites allowing audience ratings for music as well, but IDK if any is popular enough to weight in.

[Edited 6/11/18 10:38am]

I like that response, though I'm not sure it's quite what's conveyed by enjoining us to "wait for the professional reviews." That sounds a way of privileging 'expert' opinion over that of all these ungrateful, whinging laymen (aka fans). But, for me, ordinary people's enjoyment of the product is the only really important metric of success in all of this. Sales and good reviews are important insofar as they enable and help promote that, but they're just a means to an end. The end is the enjoyment we unwashed amateurs derive from it, whether the journos concur or not.

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #524 posted 06/11/18 12:21pm

deebee

avatar

NorthC said:

deebee said:

Why should that be the main metric for deciding on the success of this (or any other) release? I can understand looking at sales, because there's a incontestable commercial logic to that. And I can understand going by fans' and ordinary listeners' feedback, because that's ultimately the point of a music release. But why on earth should what paid reviewers think matter more than either of those?

There are many reviews these days that say little contentious and regurgitate the press release. The 'quality' music press is more discerning, and I often enjoy reading reviews. But still, what does it matter?? After all, it'd be peculiar for anyone to say: "Well, I don't think much of it myself, and it tanked on charts, but Rolling Stone gave it five stars!"

That's sorta what happened to Prince in the early 80s: he didn't have big hits, but be was praised by the music press and that surely helped to build his reputation. And I agree with data that this release will probably get good reviews and there might even be a few journos who know that it was an old bootleg. Plenty to write about. But of course, like record sales, the influence of the music press isn't what it used to be.

Yes, I agree it's important as a means to an end. I just mean it's not an end in itself - or a trump card.

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #525 posted 06/11/18 1:06pm

OperatingTheta
n

All these dinosaurs preoccupied with chart positions.

The scene has changed dramatically. And chart positions never were an indicator of quality or artistic success anyway. Today, they're irrelevant to most people, particularly regarding a legacy artist like Prince.

The key is a more general awareness on multiple platforms.

The majority of Prince's music may have to be served to hardcore fans through a premium subscriber service. That's where the demand is and I have no issue with that.

Casual fans can be catered to with sporadic releases of wider commercial merit, but the new WB release, while interesting, is not that.
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Reply #526 posted 06/11/18 2:01pm

luvsexy4all

for those whove been around since the early 80's ...remember how u got hooked????? is WB following THAT pattern???

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Reply #527 posted 06/11/18 2:05pm

databank

avatar

deebee said:



databank said:




deebee said:



Why should that be the main metric for deciding on the success of this (or any other) release? I can understand looking at sales, because there's a incontestable commercial logic to that. And I can understand going by fans' and ordinary listeners' feedback, because that's ultimately the point of a music release. But why on earth should what paid reviewers think matter more than either of those?

There are many reviews these days that say little contentious and regurgitate the press release. The 'quality' music press is more discerning, and I often enjoy reading reviews. But still, what does it matter?? After all, it'd be peculiar for anyone to say: "Well, I don't think much of it myself, and it tanked on charts, but Rolling Stone gave it five stars!"



Well, usually the 2 metrics for the success of any work of art is usually sales and critical response.


Fans and ordinary listeners' feedback are more difficult to measure.


For movies now Rotten Tomatoes allow regular folks' reception to be measured (to some extent, because not everyone votes and the vocal majority might in fact be a minority), and I guess there must be sites allowing audience ratings for music as well, but IDK if any is popular enough to weight in.



[Edited 6/11/18 10:38am]



I like that response, though I'm not sure it's quite what's conveyed by enjoining us to "wait for the professional reviews." That sounds a way of privileging 'expert' opinion over that of all these ungrateful, whinging laymen (aka fans). But, for me, ordinary people's enjoyment of the product is the only really important metric of success in all of this. Sales and good reviews are important insofar as they enable and help promote that, but they're just a means to an end. The end is the enjoyment we unwashed amateurs derive from it, whether the journos concur or not.


I guess it's complicated: many professional reviews are lazy pieces of writing written by hacks but they can also be the true measure of an artist's importance (David Lynch's moderate commercial success vs critical acclaim is an obvious example, Bill Laswell is another). The opinion of critics, peers, scholars, hardcore fans, hipsters and ordinary folks all matter but not all are equally measured. Sales (or streams nowadays) are a weak indicator at most because popularity is at the mercy of marketing and the vast majority of people don't necessarily have developped acquired tastes. On the other hand when you're very familiar with an artist it can sometimes be shocking to see how professional critics know nothing of an artist, but their words are those that music historians will quote. My point, I guess, is that critical acclaim and commercial success are the 2 things that history books and Wikipedia are likely to remember, so like it or not, they matter. How this record (of all records) sells won't tell us much because it's not made to be a smash hit, at least I don't believe it is. So in the end we're left with the reviews, for better or worse.
A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #528 posted 06/11/18 2:45pm

eyewishuheaven

avatar

IstenSzek said:

databank said:


And another factor, I suspect, is that it's a cheap, quick and easy option: there isn't much to restore, no tracklist to think about, no mixing to do, no baking tapes or whatever: just take the cassette, clean it a little, master it and here you go: we have a 35mn long new album, ready to go!



to me it feels like, and i hope i'm right on this, as if they are going through the vault,
cataogueing things, possibly already mastering certain things, figuring out what song
would go with what album reissue in regards to time recorded, personell invovled etc.

and then things like this rehearsal pop up amongst those tracks and they feel special
and intimate and quite magical i suppose to someone who hears them for the very first
time.

and because it doesn't cost much and because it can be cleaned, matered and put on
a cd relatively quickly, they chose to put it out there for everyone to hear and enjoy.

so in that respect i fully understand what they're doing now. IF it's just a way to put a
release out there whilst they are working on the bigger picture behind the scenes.

that way it's actually a bonus release, in my eyes. something to keep his music in the
public eye and keep some momentum moving forward to what will be the ultimate
prize; reissues stacked with bonus material and later actual full albums that prince'd
compiled and filed away.

so i'm not that pissed off anymore. i guess it's just a waiting game. let's see if they're
going to start trickling out information about reissues toward the very end of the year.

i'm guessing they will.




I like the way you think. Hopefully this is the case.

PRINCE: the only man who could wear high heels and makeup and STILL steal your woman!
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Reply #529 posted 06/11/18 3:12pm

deebee

avatar

databank said:

deebee said:

I like that response, though I'm not sure it's quite what's conveyed by enjoining us to "wait for the professional reviews." That sounds a way of privileging 'expert' opinion over that of all these ungrateful, whinging laymen (aka fans). But, for me, ordinary people's enjoyment of the product is the only really important metric of success in all of this. Sales and good reviews are important insofar as they enable and help promote that, but they're just a means to an end. The end is the enjoyment we unwashed amateurs derive from it, whether the journos concur or not.

I guess it's complicated: many professional reviews are lazy pieces of writing written by hacks but they can also be the true measure of an artist's importance (David Lynch's moderate commercial success vs critical acclaim is an obvious example, Bill Laswell is another). The opinion of critics, peers, scholars, hardcore fans, hipsters and ordinary folks all matter but not all are equally measured. Sales (or streams nowadays) are a weak indicator at most because popularity is at the mercy of marketing and the vast majority of people don't necessarily have developped acquired tastes. On the other hand when you're very familiar with an artist it can sometimes be shocking to see how professional critics know nothing of an artist, but their words are those that music historians will quote. My point, I guess, is that critical acclaim and commercial success are the 2 things that history books and Wikipedia are likely to remember, so like it or not, they matter. How this record (of all records) sells won't tell us much because it's not made to be a smash hit, at least I don't believe it is. So in the end we're left with the reviews, for better or worse.

That seems a remarkably elitist view of music - that the opinion of ordinary listeners counts for less than that of these 'professional' critics with their "developed acquired tastes." I'd say that at the heart of our discussion is the question of what the 'use' of music - and perhaps all art - is. For me, it is that it contributes something to ordinary people's lives - be it entertainment, spiritual enrichment, whatever you get from it. That's undoubtedly what this particular artist made music for (not the acclaim of professional critics), and, when you strip everything else away, that's all that matters.

I don't deny, of course, that both sales and published reviews matter. The first serves to bankroll music production and distribution; the latter helps offer a handy public estimation of its value; and both can serve as useful measures of how well a project's doing, at least in the public arena. But, as suggested, they're merely means to an end; and it seems rather tragic if "commercial success vs critical acclaim" become the only gauges of worth we can perceive, since they're both removed from whatever the music in question actually does for our own lives.

So, yes, to wrap this up: it'll certainly be interesting to read the reviews, but whatever they say, good or bad, won't serve to 'trump' the opinions of ordinary listeners and fans - at least, as I see it.

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #530 posted 06/11/18 4:26pm

Moonbeam

avatar

NorthC said:

paisleypark4 said:



SchlomoThaHomo said:


The more I think about this release, the more mystified I am by it. This is the estate's public introduction to The Vault? 35 minutes of Prince doodling at the piano, sourced from a cassette that isn't even in great condition (judging by the clear defects in Mary)??

According to Susan Rogers, there is a very strong team of advisors working on this, including a long time fan/collector (who must certainly have a copy of Eavesdropped in his collection), and this is the one that made all of them say, "Yep. This is what we need to put out to let the public know what were sitting on?"


brick



Right nod

I mean Wonderful Ass, We Can Fu** and Possessed are in much higher quality than this...I can see this being a bonus release with a 1999 Remaster but...mmm..


Why does everyone go on and on about a 1999 remaster? Fuck that. I don't want it. I already have that album. That's one good thing about this upcoming release: at least I don't have to buy an album I already own to get it.


There are a few reasons for me. First, it's my favorite Prince album and I won't mind paying for it again (I have already bought it across various formats at least a dozen times). Second, I think this is the only viable way in which we will get lots of associated content: as bonus material. If this is the manner in which we get access to the era-associated outtakes, tour footage, etc., I welcome it. Finally and most importantly, 1999 does not sound very good on CD currently. Aside from being mixed too quietly, the synths don't burst with as much life as they do on vinyl. There is no guarantee that a remaster would be better on the whole, but here's hoping.

That said, I welcome this Piano & A Microphone 1983 release and will fully support it.
Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you!
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Reply #531 posted 06/11/18 8:29pm

controversy99

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This is AWESOME news. Generally speaking, I’d rather get songs that I’ve never heard before, and I’ve certainly heard the Intimate Momsnts bootleg. But it’s one of my absolute favorite boots, and the sound quality on mine is terrible, so an official released is a fantastic idea, imo.

I’m amazed at all the complaining on this thread. Please step back for a momment. This rehearsal has some of Prince’s best live vocals and great piano playing. I can already see myself wearing out the groove by putting this on repeat.
"Love & honesty, peace & harmony"
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Reply #532 posted 06/11/18 10:04pm

Graycap23

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Intimate Moments Revisted boot was fairly clean. I need to pull it out and compare it to video that was posted. I thought that boot was pretty clean if i remember correctly.
FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
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Reply #533 posted 06/11/18 10:12pm

luv4u

Moderator

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moderator

Graycap23 said:

Intimate Moments Revisted boot was fairly clean. I need to pull it out and compare it to video that was posted. I thought that boot was pretty clean if i remember correctly.


I was listening to that last night lol

canada

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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Reply #534 posted 06/12/18 12:37am

dodger

IstenSzek said:

databank said:


And another factor, I suspect, is that it's a cheap, quick and easy option: there isn't much to restore, no tracklist to think about, no mixing to do, no baking tapes or whatever: just take the cassette, clean it a little, master it and here you go: we have a 35mn long new album, ready to go!



to me it feels like, and i hope i'm right on this, as if they are going through the vault,
cataogueing things, possibly already mastering certain things, figuring out what song
would go with what album reissue in regards to time recorded, personell invovled etc.

and then things like this rehearsal pop up amongst those tracks and they feel special
and intimate and quite magical i suppose to someone who hears them for the very first
time.

and because it doesn't cost much and because it can be cleaned, matered and put on
a cd relatively quickly, they chose to put it out there for everyone to hear and enjoy.

so in that respect i fully understand what they're doing now. IF it's just a way to put a
release out there whilst they are working on the bigger picture behind the scenes.

that way it's actually a bonus release, in my eyes. something to keep his music in the
public eye and keep some momentum moving forward to what will be the ultimate
prize; reissues stacked with bonus material and later actual full albums that prince'd
compiled and filed away.

so i'm not that pissed off anymore. i guess it's just a waiting game. let's see if they're
going to start trickling out information about reissues toward the very end of the year.

i'm guessing they will.



Someone's had their plus sign today. sym_yes.gif

Let's hope so but hard to be optimistic. As Schlomo says you have to wonder if this team of advisors had bothered to research this rehearsal to find out most P fans would have had this years ago..

[Edited 6/12/18 0:37am]

[Edited 6/12/18 0:37am]

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Reply #535 posted 06/12/18 1:54am

JorisE73

deebee said:

databank said:

deebee said: I guess it's complicated: many professional reviews are lazy pieces of writing written by hacks but they can also be the true measure of an artist's importance (David Lynch's moderate commercial success vs critical acclaim is an obvious example, Bill Laswell is another). The opinion of critics, peers, scholars, hardcore fans, hipsters and ordinary folks all matter but not all are equally measured. Sales (or streams nowadays) are a weak indicator at most because popularity is at the mercy of marketing and the vast majority of people don't necessarily have developped acquired tastes. On the other hand when you're very familiar with an artist it can sometimes be shocking to see how professional critics know nothing of an artist, but their words are those that music historians will quote. My point, I guess, is that critical acclaim and commercial success are the 2 things that history books and Wikipedia are likely to remember, so like it or not, they matter. How this record (of all records) sells won't tell us much because it's not made to be a smash hit, at least I don't believe it is. So in the end we're left with the reviews, for better or worse.

That seems a remarkably elitist view of music - that the opinion of ordinary listeners counts for less than that of these 'professional' critics with their "developed acquired tastes." I'd say that at the heart of our discussion is the question of what the 'use' of music - and perhaps all art - is. For me, it is that it contributes something to ordinary people's lives - be it entertainment, spiritual enrichment, whatever you get from it. That's undoubtedly what this particular artist made music for (not the acclaim of professional critics), and, when you strip everything else away, that's all that matters.

I don't deny, of course, that both sales and published reviews matter. The first serves to bankroll music production and distribution; the latter helps offer a handy public estimation of its value; and both can serve as useful measures of how well a project's doing, at least in the public arena. But, as suggested, they're merely means to an end; and it seems rather tragic if "commercial success vs critical acclaim" become the only gauges of worth we can perceive, since they're both removed from whatever the music in question actually does for our own lives.

So, yes, to wrap this up: it'll certainly be interesting to read the reviews, but whatever they say, good or bad, won't serve to 'trump' the opinions of ordinary listeners and fans - at least, as I see it.

In my opinion reviews only matter for sales. I don't think it important what others think of something I do or do not like and it doesn't change my opinon on something or how the music makes me feel. If I like it than why should I care what some Pro reviewer or my neighbor think of it? Reviews and reviewers are just marketing tools.

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Reply #536 posted 06/12/18 3:36am

databank

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deebee said:

databank said:

deebee said: I guess it's complicated: many professional reviews are lazy pieces of writing written by hacks but they can also be the true measure of an artist's importance (David Lynch's moderate commercial success vs critical acclaim is an obvious example, Bill Laswell is another). The opinion of critics, peers, scholars, hardcore fans, hipsters and ordinary folks all matter but not all are equally measured. Sales (or streams nowadays) are a weak indicator at most because popularity is at the mercy of marketing and the vast majority of people don't necessarily have developped acquired tastes. On the other hand when you're very familiar with an artist it can sometimes be shocking to see how professional critics know nothing of an artist, but their words are those that music historians will quote. My point, I guess, is that critical acclaim and commercial success are the 2 things that history books and Wikipedia are likely to remember, so like it or not, they matter. How this record (of all records) sells won't tell us much because it's not made to be a smash hit, at least I don't believe it is. So in the end we're left with the reviews, for better or worse.

That seems a remarkably elitist view of music - that the opinion of ordinary listeners counts for less than that of these 'professional' critics with their "developed acquired tastes." I'd say that at the heart of our discussion is the question of what the 'use' of music - and perhaps all art - is. For me, it is that it contributes something to ordinary people's lives - be it entertainment, spiritual enrichment, whatever you get from it. That's undoubtedly what this particular artist made music for (not the acclaim of professional critics), and, when you strip everything else away, that's all that matters.

I don't deny, of course, that both sales and published reviews matter. The first serves to bankroll music production and distribution; the latter helps offer a handy public estimation of its value; and both can serve as useful measures of how well a project's doing, at least in the public arena. But, as suggested, they're merely means to an end; and it seems rather tragic if "commercial success vs critical acclaim" become the only gauges of worth we can perceive, since they're both removed from whatever the music in question actually does for our own lives.

So, yes, to wrap this up: it'll certainly be interesting to read the reviews, but whatever they say, good or bad, won't serve to 'trump' the opinions of ordinary listeners and fans - at least, as I see it.

I certainly am an elitist and no, I do not think that everyone's opinion on any given topic has the same value. I take full responsibility for that.

.

However you certainly have a point, but the problem remains that we have no real mean to objectively gauge the public perception of any given piece of work. The internet certainly helps but not everyone takes the time to express their perception of any given work, like I said earlier a minority of extremely vocal people can give the impression they speak for the bulk of us, when they don't. So IDK. I have no solution to offer.

.

But in the end I also believe (right or wrong) that most "ordinary" listeners and fans are going to enjoy this release, as long as a blues piano and vocals record fits their musical tastes (obviously, there are people who'd never listen to a piano and vocals R&B album no matter who records it). Our perception of whether this is or not the "right" release is very much biased by the fact that 1. we have been familiar with this particular recording for 25 years and 2. we have an unusual knowledge of what type of other recordings are there in the vault, that could have been released instead. It's a bit like Crystal Ball (1998), one orger once wrote that it was judged [by hardcore fans who knew bootlegs] for what it wasn't much more than for what it was. I agree with this statement (again, right or wrong).

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #537 posted 06/12/18 3:45am

andrewm7

just listening back to back to the tidal version of “Mary don’t you weep” and the boot version of this rehearsal and I wanted to express my hope to those in charge of these things that this new album should be sourced from the best available recording regardless of its provenance.
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Reply #538 posted 06/12/18 6:36am

BartVanHemelen

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IstenSzek said:

and then things like this rehearsal pop up amongst those tracks and they feel special
and intimate and quite magical i suppose to someone who hears them for the very first
time.

and because it doesn't cost much and because it can be cleaned, matered and put on
a cd relatively quickly, they chose to put it out there for everyone to hear and enjoy.

so in that respect i fully understand what they're doing now. IF it's just a way to put a
release out there whilst they are working on the bigger picture behind the scenes.

.

If this was one of four releases this year: sure. As the first "independent" (= not an expanded version of a classic album) release, 2.5 years after Prince's death? Ridiculous.

.



that way it's actually a bonus release, in my eyes. something to keep his music in the
public eye and keep some momentum moving forward to what will be the ultimate
prize; reissues stacked with bonus material and later actual full albums that prince'd
compiled and filed away.

.

There comes a certain point at which you need to feed the donkey instead of waving a carrot in front of him. PR Deluxe was already somewhat of a disappointment, and this upcoming release feels overhyped.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #539 posted 06/12/18 6:51am

udo

avatar

IstenSzek said:

to me it feels like, and i hope i'm right on this, as if they are going through the vault,
cataogueing things, possibly already mastering certain things, figuring out what song
would go with what album reissue in regards to time recorded, personell invovled etc.

.

`They are avoiding both the hassle and work for now and put out this quickie`?

.

and then things like this rehearsal pop up amongst those tracks and they feel special
and intimate and quite magical i suppose to someone who hears them for the very first
time.

.

That someone that does not knwo this side of Prince and thus was not looking for it anyways. Tehy want hits. Are there any hits on this release?

.

and because it doesn't cost much and because it can be cleaned, matered and put on
a cd relatively quickly, they chose to put it out there for everyone to hear and enjoy.

.

The pricing most certainly does not reflect the ease and lightness of this process as you describe it.

The pricing is more fit for a sub-300 boutique release qith certain specific qualities.

.

so in that respect i fully understand what they're doing now. IF it's just a way to put a

release out there whilst they are working on the bigger picture behind the scenes.

.

Would it be so hard to find the P&M 2016 recordings?

Would these be so hard to clean up, master, track, etc?

Would these not be seen as the most epic perfromances P did in his whole career?

If only they would do the final performance isntead of the whole 'tour' (because the market cannot bear all that), how much more work would it be than this 35 minute thingie?

.

that way it's actually a bonus release,

.

A bonus release would be not that expen$ive.

.

in my eyes. something to keep his music in the
public eye

.

Looking at the price, again, they could have a big promotional budget so time will tell if your assumption is right.

so i'm not that pissed off anymore. i guess it's just a waiting game. let's see if they're
going to start trickling out information about reissues toward the very end of the year.

i'm guessing they will.

.

Sure, take a look again at how early they release info about this 35 minute thingie.

It is not about communicating as they lied about the PR remastered release.

It is about the actual goods and the pace we are able to buy them, first.

Pills and thrills and daffodils will kill... If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.
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